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Page "Consciousness" ¶ 23
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lively and exchange
Close to half-a-million listeners tune in every Sunday afternoon to hear a lively exchange of ideas between callers and invited guests, and a broad cross-section of opinion on the topic of the day.
The newspaper has a lively letters page where expatriate and Thai regulars exchange opinions on local and international concerns, with varying degrees of accuracy and articulacy.
An MUS education is characterized by a vigorous curriculum, a lively exchange of ideas, and supportive teaching.
World War II was followed by a period of hyperinflation, characterized by a lively private stock and real exchange trading in currencies and precious metals, conducted partially in the damaged building of the exchange and partially in the neighbouring coffee-houses.
The two would remain close, maintaining a lively letter exchange, until Winckelmann was murdered in Trieste in 1768.

lively and over
There exist a number of influential texts attributed to Nāgārjuna though, as there are many pseudepigrapha attributed to him, lively controversy exists over which are his authentic works.
In addition to the above, there are many other works attributed to Nāgārjuna, and lively controversy over which are authentic.
New York publisher Evert Augustus Duyckinck wrote to Nathaniel Hawthorne that " it is a lively and pleasant book, not over philosophical perhaps.
A further advance around 1960 replaced the metals with fibreglass, which improved the " springiness " of the skis and made them much more lively over bumps.
Sun Valley has a lively arts community offering a variety of opportunities through over thirty presenting organizations.
In the late 1920s the principles of equal access to " Licht, Luft und Sonne " and the social effects of a guaranteed "" Existenzminimum " became a matter of lively popular debate all over Germany.
I'd say, ' You were out with this person or that person ,' and he'd come back at me in the same way, and we'd have a lively time of it, but we're over that now.
In 1960, McGraw-Hill published My First Fifty Years in Politics, by Joe Martin as told to Robert J. Donovan, a lively and detailed account of Martin's role in American politics over a half-century.
This includes a profile of Van Leo described as " a fellow with a brilliant smile and lively eyes, bending over prints or studying a profile, conjuring up the fascinating phantoms that people the most beautiful of dreams.
There remains a lively debate on the left, over whether the Red Clydeside movement constituted a revolutionary opportunity for the working class, though on the face of it, it would appear that the revolutionary potential of the Clydeside working class has been exaggerated.
The Festival culminates every evening with the x-change-a lively informal roundup of the day's events where festival-goers can ask questions, debate and unwind over a drink.
After 1846 and the disintegration of the Tory party over Peel's adoption of free trade, Lord Lyndhurst did not attend parliament sessions as often, but he continued to take a lively interest in public affairs and to make speeches.
Additionally, there is a lively debate over the meaning of the terms " Jewish State " and " State of the Jews ".
Every week, host Rex Murphy presides over a lively discussion on an issue of national interest or importance and invites listeners to call in with their opinions and thoughts.
Vanessa Feltz took over Lisa I ' Anson's afternoon slot with a lively and fun phone-in.
I'd say, ' You were out with this person or that person ,' and he'd come back at me in the same way, and we'd have a lively time of it, but we're over that now.
Roberts continued to affirm his faith in the divine origins of the Book of Mormon until his death in 1933 ; but as Terryl Givens has written, " a lively debate has emerged over whether his personal conviction really remained intact in the aftermath of his academic investigations.
The twentieth century witnessed a lively debate over the extent of Hellenization in the Levant and particularly among the ancient Palestinian Jews that has continued until today.
Ho is also noted for a lively and huge open market that attracts people from all over Ghana and migrants from Togo.
Nevertheless, his sharp, authentic descriptions of the hunting field have retained their popularity among fox-hunters ... Among a wider public his mordant observations on men, women, and manners ; his entertaining array of eccentrics, rakes, and rogues ; his skill in the construction of lively dialogue ( a matter over which he took great pains ); his happy genius for unforgettable and quotable phrases ; and above all, his supreme comic masterpiece, Jorrocks, have won him successive generations of devoted followers.
There are over 70 bars within the city boundaries, the ones around the Zimmerplien being the most lively during summer.
Invoking the so-called unities from Aristotle's Poetics ( as interpreted by Italian and refined by French scholars over the last century ), the four speakers discuss what makes a play " a just and lively imitation " of human nature in action.
Even Neander's final argument with Crites over whether rhyme is suitable in drama depends on Aristotle's Poetics: Neander says that Aristotle demands a verbally artful (" lively ") imitation of nature, while Crites thinks that dramatic imitation ceases to be " just " when it departs from ordinary speech -- i. e. prose or blank verse.
His board, Citadel-86 Test System, served not only as a discussion board and distribution center for the software, but also was the focal point for a lively Citadel-86 community in the 612 area code ( the Twin Cities ), which at their peak numbered roughly forty systems, and probably more than 100 over the years.

lively and what
But though Kimpton put Chicago in what he felt was working order, some old grads feel that it still needs the kind of lively teachers who filled it in the heady Hutchins era.
He didn't look like what I thought of as an old man, and his lively and erudite speech made him seem even younger.
Leo's lively interest in art and literature, to say nothing of his natural liberality, his alleged nepotism, his political ambitions and necessities, and his immoderate personal luxury, exhausted within two years the hard savings of Julius II, and precipitated a financial crisis from which he never emerged and which was a direct cause of most of what, from a papal point of view, were calamities of his pontificate.
The variations located two after each canon ( 5, 8, 11, 14, 17, 20, 23, 26, and 29 ) are what Kirkpatrick calls " arabesques "; they are variations in lively tempo with a great deal of hand-crossing.
After incorporation there was lively discussion about what the new city should be called.
Roger of Wendover ’ s work is, however, now valued not so much for what he culled from previous writers as for its full and lively narrative of contemporary events, from 1216 to 1235, including the signing of Magna Carta.
Like most chronicles, it is now valued not so much for what was culled from previous writers, as for its full and lively narrative of contemporary events from 1215 to 1235, including the signing of Magna Carta by King John at Runnymede.
When in 1975 dialect folk and rock bands such as Normaal and Boh Foi Toch became successful with their overt disapproval of what they experienced as " misplaced Dutch snobbery " and the western Dutch contempt for ( speakers of ) Low Saxon dialects, they quickly gained an enormous following among the more rurally oriented inhabitants of the Netherlands, launching Low Saxon as a vibrant sub-culture, which is very lively up until today.
This pattern consists of apostasy, hardship, crying out to the Lord, and rescue and it is clearly present in the tale of Ehud: apostasy and hardship occur in Judges 3. 12,The Israelites again did what was evil in the sight of the Lord ; and the Lord strengthened King Eglon of Moab against Israel .” The “ crying out to the Lord ” and the subsequent rescue are evident in Judges 3. 15: “ but when the Israelites cried out to the Lord, the Lord raised up for them a deliverer, Ehud son of Gera .” The rather lively and humorous tale is ended with the refrain of “ and the land had rest 80 years ,” ( Judges 3. 30 ) an editorially constructed ending typical to Gideon and other “ major ” judge stories in the book of Judges.
If this, indeed, is what Berossos presumed, he made a mistake that would cost him interested Greek readers who were accustomed to a much more varied and lively historical narrative where there could be no doubt who was an evil ruler and who was not.
It is generally acknowledged that the text is related to Chrétien de Troyes ' unfinished Old French poem Perceval ( c. 1181 x 1191 ), but the nature of this relation has been a topic of lively debate, notably the question if and to what extent the Welsh tale was adapted from Perceval.
Stendhal, who spent decades as a professional diplomat in northern Italy, gives a lively and interesting account of the court, though all of what he describes is entirely fictional, as Parma was ruled by Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma during the time of the novel.
Language groups such as the German Network, French Network ( FrNet ) and Japanese Network ( J-Net ), as well as subject-based networks such as STEP and infotech, maintain lively internet-based groups for purposes such as the clarification of terminological queries, discussion of best practice, sharing work, and organizing social events within what is often seen as a solitary profession.
Readers can comment on entries, and there is usually a lively discussion of what each entry means and how they fit together.
Now the workmanship of these representations was so magnificent and lively in the construction of the things, that it exhibited what had been done to such as did not see it, as if they had been there really present.
During that year offensive statistics rose dramatically in what would be mistakenly attributed to the introduction of a new " lively " ball.
If there is still academic debate about the name, what is certain is that Roman Malton was, from the second half of the first century, a busy and a lively place.
There are also differences among Crimean Tatars as to what the goals of the diaspora and the national movement should be and how to reach those goals, leading to a lively internal politics, as in other flourishing diasporas of the 1990s.
The new group tried to create a vibrant, youthful, lively poetry, and not perpetuate what they saw as being something second-hand from the literary establishment.
All through its existence the family has had a very lively history, with various authors taking very different views on what should be part of this family.
Ben Brantley, reviewing for the New York Times, wrote: " About halfway into its intermissionless 90 minutes, Little Fish starts to lose its shapely, sharp-edged contours and turn into a sentimental, well, blob ... Mr. LaChiusa ... and Ms. Daniele have done a swell job of fashioning a lively musical about what it means to feel lifeless in contemporary Manhattan ... Like many American musical composers under 50, Mr. LaChiusa is an artistic descendant of Mr. Sondheim, and in many ways Little Fish can be regarded as a direct, latter-day answer to Company.
" Free festivals are practical demonstrations of what society could be like all the time: miniature utopia's of joy and communal awareness rising for a few days from a grey morass of mundane, inhibited, paranoid and repressive everyday existence … The most lively people escape geographically and physically to the ‘ Never Never Land ’ of a free festival where they become citizens, indeed rulers, in a new reality.

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