Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Michelangelo" ¶ 31
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Censorship and always
* Censorship always defeats its own purpose, for it creates in the end the kind of society that is incapable of exercising real discretion.

Censorship and followed
Censorship, denial of publication allocations and open intimidation of opposition groups followed.
Censorship remained strong in Poland, but the fall of the Stalinist regime of Bolesław Bierut following the death of Joseph Stalin led to a loss of control allowing the film, " showing the tragic fate of those who followed the wrong orders ", as the press put it at the time, to be made.

Censorship and described
The “ the perverse dynamic ”, is one of Dollimore ’ s most crucial theoretical concepts, first described in Sexual Dissidence, and later applied in Sex, Literature, and Censorship.

Censorship and ("
His views on controversial issues such as censorship and birth control were ambiguous ; after expressing initial support for the Censorship Bill, he eventually went on to denounce it in scathing terms (" I think it is high time the men of this country found some other way of loving God than by hating women "), and while generally professing to oppose the sale of prophylactics, he voiced support for their usage in certain cases.
" (" Down with Censorship!

Censorship and ",
" Some Observations on the Censorship of Claudius and Vitellius, AD 47 – 48 ", American Journal of Philology, 114 ( 4 ): 611 – 618.
* Penrose, Roger: " The Question of Cosmic Censorship ", Chapter 5 in Black Holes and Relativistic Stars, Robert Wald ( editor ), ( 1994 ) ( ISBN 0-226-87034-0 )
* Shapiro, S. L., and Teukolsky, S. A .: " Formation of Naked Singularities: The Violation of Cosmic Censorship ", Physical Review Letters 66, 994-997 ( 1991 )
In his essay " Bookburning and Censorship in Ancient Rome ", Frederick H. Cramer talks about the "... spineless schoolmaster Quintilian grudgingly admitted that ' the bold utterances of Cremutius also have their admirers and deserve their fame, but he went on to assure readers that ' the passages that brought him to his ruin have been expurgated.
* Salil Tripathi, " Praise the Lord and Buy Insurance ", Index on Censorship Volume 34, Number 4, 2005. p. 188 – 192.
* Carol, Avedon ( 1994 ) " Nudes, Prudes and Attitudes: Pornography and Censorship ", New Clarion Press, ISBN 1-873797-13-3
Its irreverent attitude was in the tradition of the student newspapers, but it satirical and topical coverage of local and national issues and people developed a national profile, and made it a target for " the Establishment ", and soon a prominent casualty of the so-called " Censorship Wars ".

Censorship and original
Because the original version of the film was rejected by the New York State Censorship Board in April 1933, the film was softened by cutting out some material ( such as Lily's study of Nietzschean philosophy as well as various sexually suggestive shots ).
Dave Grohl ( Nirvana / Foo Fighters ) only plays on " No More Censorship " as the reunion featured the original drummer Kent Stax.

always and followed
I would have liked the town and the busyness of its people but I always followed Lilly into the peace of the silent and unstaring road.
He was always aware of the women's eyes which followed him, admiring him.
Aspirated consonants are not always followed by vowels or other voiced sounds.
It is usually, although not always, followed by a cut back to the first shot, when the cutaway avoids a jump cut.
This convention, however, is not always followed, and not explained to the average person clearly ( and is sometimes ambiguous, such as at the beginning of a sentence ).
In Russian and Swiss German, for example, the verb " to call ( by telephone )" is always followed by a noun in the dative.
( Note that, for historical reasons, this standard is not always strictly followed.
In France, there was Lettres persanes ( 1721 ) by Montesquieu, followed by Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloïse ( 1761 ) by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Laclos ' Les Liaisons dangereuses ( 1782 ), which used the epistolary form to great dramatic effect, because the sequence of events was not always related directly or explicitly.
Robinson wrote that, where the Gospel narrative accounts can be checked for consistency with surviving material evidence, the account in the Gospel of John is commonly the more plausible ; that it is generally easier to reconcile the various synoptic accounts within John's narrative framework, than it is to explain John's narrative within the framework of any of the synoptics ; and that, where in the Gospel Jesus and his disciples are described as travelling around identifiable locations, the trips in question can always be plausibly followed on the ground, which he says is not the case for any synoptic Gospel.
Similar sorties followed on 10 and 11 January, but the results of these " cat and mouse " operations were always the same: " the Greek destroyers always managed to remain outside the Ottoman warships ' range, and each time the cruisers fired a few rounds before breaking off the chase.
In 1967 the Holt government made the historic decision not to depreciate the Australian dollar in line with Britain's depreciation of the pound sterling, a custom that Australia had previously always followed, but this decision created considerable dissent within the Coalition ; Country Party leader John McEwen was particularly angered by the move — he saw it as a threat to Australia's balance of payments and feared that it would lead to increased production costs for primary industry.
From the onset the Kievan princes followed the Byzantine example and kept the Church dependent on them, even for its revenues, so that the Russian Church and state were always closely linked.
However, monotheism has not always been followed in practice.
One must also note that in addition to redacting the Mishnah, Rabbi and his court also ruled on which opinions should be followed, though the rulings do not always appear in the text.
This migration followed a predictable pattern from permanent winter villages through several temporary camps, nearly always returning to the same locations year after year.
However, despite a Woolworths store on its ground floor, a major travel company housed on the floor above, and a restaurant offering fine views over the city on the top floor, the economic situation of the time meant that it would not be followed by more buildings in that vein: no further redevelopment in the immediate vicinity of Potsdamer Platz occurred prior to World War II, and so Columbushaus would always seem out of place in that location.
Star names from these catalogues include the initials of which of the four catalogues they are from ( though the Southern follows the example of the Bonner and uses BD ; CPD is often shortened to CP ), followed by the angle of declination of the star ( rounded towards zero, and thus ranging from + 00 to + 89 and-00 to-89 ), followed by an arbitrary number as there are always thousands of stars at each angle.
His mother, Subha Tulfah al-Mussallat, named her newborn son Saddam, which in Arabic means " One who confronts "; he is always referred to by this personal name, which may be followed by the patronymic and other elements.
" If the treaty is executed in multiple copies in different languages, that fact is always noted, and is followed by a stipulation that the versions in different languages are equally authentic.
Theseus followed Daedalus ' instructions given to Ariadne ; go forwards, always down and never left or right.
The sequence of moves ( white and red ) is not always followed.
The existential analytic of Being and Time was thus always only a first step in Heidegger's philosophy, to be followed by the " dismantling " ( Destruktion ) of the history of philosophy, that is, a transformation of its language and meaning, that would have made of the existential analytic only a kind of " limit case " ( in the sense in which special relativity is a limit case of general relativity ).

always and Michelangelo
In the original comic books, Michelangelo was initially depicted as fun-loving, carefree, and, while not as aggressive as Raphael, always ready to fight.
Michelangelo and young Madison Sedgewick are friends, but busy Mr. and Mrs. Sedgewick are always neglecting her.
* Mr Contestant, a hopeless call-in quiz-show contestant who would always blow the final part of the answer under time pressure and end with the same nonsensical answer, like " Name the 4 Mutant Ninja Turtles "... " Donatello ... Michelangelo ... Rafael and, erm, ahhhh " " Got to hurry you " "... eerrmmm, ohhhhhh Hartley Hare!

always and once
He looked at her out of himself, she thought, as he did only for an instant at a time, the look which always surprised her even now when his uncombable hair was yellowing a little and his breath came hard through his nicotine-choked lungs, the look of the gaunt youth she had suddenly found herself staring at in the Tate Gallery on a Thursday once.
Even if that's all the promise he ever gave or ever will give, the giving of it once was enough and you believed it then and you will always believe it, even when it is finally the only thing in the world you have left to believe, and the whole world is telling you that one was a lie.
Milne once wrote of Ashdown Forest: " In that enchanted place on the top of the forest a little boy and his bear will always be playing ".
The Big Book ( from Alcoholics Anonymous ) states that once a person is an alcoholic, they are always an alcoholic, but does not define what is meant by the term " alcoholic " in this context.
Few number theorists doubt that the Riemann hypothesis is true ( it is said that Atle Selberg was once a sceptic, and J. E. Littlewood always was ).
He covered his notebooks with drawings, and he once said, " I was always hiding behind the instructor's chair, drawing for the duration of the class ".
In addition, there is always the fear that the viral vector, once inside the patient, may recover its ability to cause disease.
When Jon does take Liz on a date, Garfield always tags along, and he once ate all the bread, along with all the rest of the food in the place.
Paul VI himself, even as commission members issued their personal views over the years, always reaffirmed the teachings of the Church, repeating them more than once in the first years of his Pontificate.
" But this originality does not always bring large financial reward ; as Pei replied to the successful architect: " Just once, I'd like to make the kind of money you do.
It will always be a subject of humiliating reflection to me, that I was once an active instrument in a business at which my heart now shudders.
If the elements of S are pairwise orthogonal, the answer is always yes: for any such set there exists a measurement which will ascertain the exact state of the system without disturbing it, and once we know the state we can prepare another system in the same state.
Renwick once pointed out in an interview that the name " Victor " was ironic, since he almost always ends up a loser.
Achieving this would require retyping it once, but thereafter it would always be accessible for computer searching – as well as for whatever new editions of the dictionary might be desired, starting with an integration of the supplementary volumes and the main text.
But this was not always the case ; in the early 20th century, once it became apparent that the " sport " was worked, pro wrestling was looked down on as a cheap entertainment for the uneducated working class — an attitude that still exists to varying degrees today.
Also, the body is not always a set of rows because in SQL it is possible for the same row to appear more than once in the same body.
Pepper seeds can always survive the digestive tract of birds ; their fruit becomes brightly colored once its seeds are mature enough to germinate, thereby attracting the attention of birds who then distribute the seeds.
Quantification is also apparent in language referring to time, marked by words like always, often, sometimes, once or never.
" These operators were almost always women until the mid-1960s when men were once again hired.
Traders who once only dealt in livestock, now dealt in many handmade goods, and the wool trade always stayed a large part of the trade Reportedly, 20, 000 sheep changed hands at one 19th century fair.
Besides its public function in the synagogue, the Babylonian Talmud also mentions targum in the context of a personal study requirement: " A person should always review his portions of scripture along with the community, reading the scripture twice and the targum once " ( Berakhot 8a-b ).
While the Constitution always granted Congress the authority to meet on a different day without the need to pass an amendment, § 2 of the Twentieth Amendment " tidied up " the constitutional text by paralleling the original provision requiring that the Congress meet at least once a year in December, and changing it to January 3 ( unless changed by law ).
This expert group meets once or twice a year in V4 capitals on a rotation basis, and the head of the host country delegation always chairs the meeting.
As the film progresses, it emerges that Peter Falk was once an angel, who, having grown tired of always observing and never experiencing, renounced his immortality to become a participant in the world.

0.627 seconds.