Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Virginia Gildersleeve" ¶ 21
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Rosalind and Rosenberg
According to Gildersleeve biographer Rosalind Rosenberg, at that point, both Columbia and Barnard began recruiting students from outside New York City and by evaluating all applicants on the basis of psychological tests, interviews, and letters of recommendation, as well as academic criteria, reducing the number of Jewish applicants accepted.
* Rosalind Rosenberg, Separate Spheres University Press Haven

Rosalind and
Harold Bloom describes him as " rancidly vicious ," and writes that " this more intense rancidity works as a touchstone should, to prove the true gold of Rosalind s spirit ".
Touchstone affects the front of a malcontented cynic, thus serving as proof of Rosalind s quick wit.
In 1953, with the help of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin s X-ray crystallography, James Watson and Francis Crick proposed DNA is structured as a double helix.
In 1953, with the help of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin s X-ray crystallography, James Watson and Francis Crick proposed DNA is structured as a double helix.
The study also found a very small ( d ' ≈ 0. 07, less than 7 %, of a standard deviation ) average male advantage in g. A 2006 study by Rosalind Arden and Robert Plomin focused on children aged 2, 3, 4, 7, 9 and 10 and stated that there was greater variance " among boys at every age except age two despite the girls mean advantage from ages two to seven.
The king s pyramid has three smaller queen s pyramids associated with it and five boat pits .< ref name =" PM "> Porter, Bertha and Moss, Rosalind, < cite > Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, Statues, Reliefs and Paintings Volume III: Memphis, Part I Abu Rawash to Abusir.
In 1996 Carolina Panthers football team owners Rosalind and Jerry Richardson ( Barnes former Colts teammate ) commissioned Barnes to create the large painting Victory in Overtime ( approximately 7 ft. x 14 ft .).
It becomes clearer when the suspect contends that he had been dating Katy s older sister, Rosalind.
Rosalind s psychopathic tendencies get the better of her, and once she knows that she has Cassie in her debt, she brags about the whole thing and how she got the murderer to come up with the idea by telling him that all three girls were being sexually abused by their father, but that Katy liked it and was therefore their father s favorite.
She also admitted to Cassie that Katy was strong-willed and wouldn t always do as Rosalind told her, so she had poisoned her to make her sick.
Two months later, at the same venue, Coghlan played Orlando opposite Fanny Davenport s Rosalind in Shakespeare s As You Like It.

Rosalind and has
Scholars such as Rosalind Clark hold that the names are unrelated, the Welsh " Morgan " ( Wales being the source of Arthurian legend ) being derived from root words associated with the sea, while the Irish " Morrígan " has its roots either in a word for " terror " or a word for " greatness ".
There has been a significant revival of virtue ethics in the past half-century, through the work of such philosophers as G. E. M. Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Alasdair Macintyre, and Rosalind Hursthouse.
Thackeray has Rosalind using their as a polite circumlocution, perhaps avoiding the directness of she ... her, and generic his in a context involving only women ; or perhaps with Rosalind meaning the statement to apply to people in general with Becky Sharp as an example.
MIT has also contributed significant research in this field, notably Things That Think consortium ( directed by Hiroshi Ishii, Joseph A. Paradiso and Rosalind Picard ) at the Media Lab and the CSAIL effort known as Project Oxygen.
She rose to prominence in 1961 playing Rosalind in As You Like It with the Royal Shakespeare Company and has since made more than 35 appearances on London's West End and Broadway, winning both the Tony and Olivier Awards.
Middle-aged schoolteacher Rosemary ( Rosalind Russell ), who rents a room at the Owens house, has been brought to the picnic by store owner Howard Bevens ( Arthur O ' Connell ).
Rosalind Russell's performance as an emotionally distraught, often overbearing middle-aged schoolteacher has drawn both admiring and highly dismissive commentary in DVD reviews.
Since then it has been endowed with papers from other political figures including former Prime Ministers Margaret Thatcher and John Major, as well as former Leader of the Opposition Neil Kinnock, alongside those of eminent scientists and engineers, including Reginald Victor Jones, Rosalind Franklin and Sir Frank Whittle.
Rosalind Russell has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 1708 Vine Street.
* Rosalind Hursthouse has published On Virtue Ethics.
Douglas is a granddaughter of the actor Melvyn Douglas and his first wife, artist Rosalind Hightower, and has said that her grandfather's performance in Being There, in particular, was influential on her own career.
The rolltop has starred in many plays and movies, the most famous one being probably a movie titled His Girl Friday with Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell.
He has two daughters, Tess and Emily, and two sons, Oscar and Rupert, from his second and third marriages, to Rosalind Tong and Diane Millstead respectively.
He married Rosalind Ayres on 23 November 1974 in Ealing and has two sons by a previous marriage.
Neil is married to Tina Larsen Neil and has twin daughters, Rosalind and Vivienne.
It has been criticized as being excessively sexist towards Rosalind Franklin, another participant in the discovery, who was deceased by the time Watson's book was written.
Ruth has obtained all his letters to Rosalind, and she twists and distorts the contents, insinuating that Ray was sexually exploiting Rosalind, an innocent, naive, underage fan.
Ruth blatantly exploits the situation, creating controversy about Rosalind, who has just released a record.
The British soprano Rosalind Plowright defines a spinto voice as one that has a tonal colour one down from its range.
Ovid mentions that Paris had carved the name of Ænone on a poplar, as Shakespeare has Orlando carve the name of Rosalind upon the trees of the forest of Arden.
Furthermore, Wortham's sources are impossible to reconstruct because as Dr. Rosalind Moad, archivist at King's College, Cambridge, has pointed out the papers taken by Wortham to produce this biography " disappeared " after Wortham published the work.
He has four children: a daughter by his first wife Rosalind Dease, a fellow-student at the RCA, and two daughters and a son by his second wife Susan Evans, the daughter of the writer George Ewart Evans.

Rosalind and
* Two Sorts of Naturalism ”, in Rosalind Hursthouse, Gavin Lawrence, and Warren Quinn, eds., Virtues and Reasons: Philippa Foot and Moral Theory ( Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1996 ), pp. 149 – 79 ; translated into German (“ Zwei Arten von Naturalismus ”), Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie v ( 1997 ), 687-710
At the Kenyan port the party were embarked in the East African Naval Vessel Rosalind ”, escorted by the frigate HMS Loch Fada ”.
A powerful, yet unstable social hierarchy structures interactions between Group Members in any given clique, always topped by the highest-status member, labeled by psychologists as the Leader ” or Queen Bee .” In her now famous ethnography of adolescent cliques, ‘’ Queen Bees and Wannabes: Helping your Daughter Survive Cliques, Gossip, Boyfriends & Other Realities of Adolescence ,’’ author Rosalind Wiseman explains the standard set of roles most frequently adopted by male and female clique members.

Rosalind and Through
The grail is central in many modern Arthurian works, including Charles Williams's novel War in Heaven and his two collections of poems about Taliessin, Taliessin Through Logres and Region of the Summer Stars, and in feminist author Rosalind Miles ' Child of the Holy Grail.
Through the 1960s Greenberg remained an influential figure on a younger generation of critics including Michael Fried and Rosalind E. Krauss.

Rosalind and her
In the spring of 1935 Blair met his future wife Eileen O ' Shaughnessy, when his landlady, Rosalind Obermeyer, who was studying for a masters degree in psychology at University College London, invited some of her fellow students to a party.
*" It can't be true what the girls at the Rectory said, that her mother was an opera-dancer —"" A person can't help their birth ," Rosalind replied with great liberality.
During the early 1950s, while Watson and Crick were determining the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid ( DNA ), they made use of unpublished X-ray diffraction images taken by Rosalind Franklin, shown at meetings and shared with them by Maurice Wilkins, and of Franklin's preliminary account of her detailed analysis of the X-ray images included in an unpublished 1952 progress report for the King's College laboratory of Sir John Randall.
Her last public appearance was September 23, 1974, at a party honoring her old friend Rosalind Russell at New York's Rainbow Room.
Over five successive nights, a different female star discussed her career and answered questions from the audience ; Myrna Loy, Rosalind Russell, Lana Turner, Sylvia Sidney, and Joan Crawford were the other participants.
Hawks then turned to Rosalind Russell, who was annoyed that she was not his first choice, even arriving at her audition with wet hair.
Beatrix and her sisters Rosalind Birnie Philip and Ethel Whibley posed for many of Whistler's paintings and drawings ; with Ethel Whibley being the model for Mother of pearl and silver: The Andalusian ( 1888 – 1900 ).
Soon, Chris becomes enamored of her because his loveless marriage is tormented by his shrewish wife Adele ( Rosalind Ivan ), who idolizes her former husband, a policeman drowned while trying to save a woman.
She repeated her stage role of Rosalind, opposite Laurence Olivier's Orlando, in the 1936 film As You Like It, the first sound film version of Shakespeare's play, and the first sound film of any Shakespeare play filmed in England.
In her 1991 book, Lives in the Shadow with J. Krishnamurti, Radha Rajagopal Sloss, the daughter of estranged Krishnamurti associates Rosalind and Desikacharya Rajagopal, wrote of Krishnamurti's relationship with her parents, including a secret affair between Krishnamurti and Rosalind which lasted for many years.
Rosalind Russell ( June 4, 1907 – November 28, 1976 ) was an American actress of stage and screen, perhaps best known for her role as a fast-talking newspaper reporter in the Howard Hawks screwball comedy His Girl Friday, as well as the role of Mame Dennis in the film Auntie Mame.
One critic wrote: " Rosalind Russell as the ' other woman ' in the story gives an intelligent and deft handling to her scenes with Young.
From the time of Young's retirement in the 1960s, until not long before her death, she devoted herself to volunteer work for charities and churches with her friends of many years: Jane Wyman, Irene Dunne, and Rosalind Russell.
Other performances which many considered definitive were as Millamant in The Way of the World ( 1924 ), Rosalind in As You Like It ( 1926 and 1936 ), the Nurse in Romeo and Juliet ( 1932 – 35 and 1961 ), and, most notably, as Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being Earnest ( 1939 ), a role with which she became identified in the public's mind ( in particular for her drippingly sarcastic delivery of the line: " A handbag ?").
After Lady Macbeth she played Desdemona, Rosalind, Ophelia and Volumnia, all with great success ; but it was as Queen Catherine in Henry VIII that she discovered a part almost as well adapted to her acting powers as that of Lady Macbeth.
The RSC gave her the opportunity to play many of the Shakespearean heroines, including Rosaline in Love's Labour's Lost, Portia in The Merchant of Venice, Ophelia in Hamlet, Kate in The Taming of the Shrew, Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing, Celia and Rosalind in As You Like It, Lavinia in Titus Andronicus and her Cleopatra, magisterial, ardent and seductive, in 1973, about which critics raved, and which is said to be a definitive performance.
The term appears to have been coined by the feminist critic Rosalind Coward in her 1984 book Female Desire in which she writes: " Cooking food and presenting it beautifully is an act of servitude.

1.065 seconds.