Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

17 Sentences With "university circles"

How to use university circles in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "university circles" and check conjugation/comparative form for "university circles". Mastering all the usages of "university circles" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Eco was virtually unknown outside university circles until well into middle age, when he found himself an international celebrity overnight after he published his first novel, an unorthodox detective story set in a medieval monastery.
Sikder became the president of the front. After the formation of the front, the party initiated a campaign of armed struggle against the Bangladeshi state. The party had strong support amongst university circles. It published Lal Jhanda (Red Flag) and Sangbad Bulletine.
He was one of the highest ranked lecturers and opinion leaders among the major Turkish university circles. He gave more than 300 lectures at various universities. He was a teacher for MBA students in Yeditepe University of İstanbul. He was the co-founder of Alarko Educational Foundation, which provided scholarships for thousands of Turkish students.
The Fish Disks were distributed at computer stores and Commodore Amiga enthusiast clubs. Contributors submitted applications and source code and the best of these each month were assembled and released as a diskette. Since the Internet was not yet in popular usage outside military and university circles, this was a primary way for enthusiasts to share work and ideas. Fish disks, Amiga Stuff.
That year, he emigrated to the United States because he was unhappy with the rise of National Socialism. Jaeger expressed his veiled disapproval in 1937 with Humanistische Reden und Vortraege (Humanist Talks and Lectures), and his book on Demosthenes (1938) based on his Sather lecture from 1934. Jaeger's messages were fully understood in German university circles; the ardent Nazi followers sharply attacked Jaeger. In the United States, Jaeger worked as a full professor at the University of Chicago from 1936 to 1939.
The Witch-Cult in Western Europe is a 1921 anthropological book by Margaret Murray, published at the height of success of The Golden Bough by anthropologist James George Frazer. For the book, certain university circles celebrated Margaret Murray as the expert on western witchcraft, though her theories were widely discredited. For the period 1929-1968, she wrote the "Witchcraft" article in the successive editions of the Encyclopædia Britannica. In 1962, The Witch-Cult in Western Europe was reprinted by Oxford University Press.
Much of it is set in a university library that, according to his daughter Alison Jolly, borrowed from those of Yale and Cornell. The New York Times review concluded, "We do not know who W. Bolingbroke Johnson is, but he writes a good story with an academic atmosphere that is not so highly rarefied as we have been led to believe it should be in university circles."Isaac Anderson, "New Mystery Stories" (review of The Widening Stain), The New York Times, 8 February 1942. Available via ProQuest.
University circles were adamantly opposed to Communists, and mostly to the right -- a lot of them were members of the monarchist Action française (AF). Until the 1930s, Communist presence in estudiantine sectors remained small, and the function of responsible of students quickly disappeared in the JC. The majority of communist students gathered in the 1920s in the Union fédérale des étudiants (UFE, Federal Union of Students). Danielle and Laurent Casanova were both leaders in this union. The UFE, which boasted several thousand members, counted however many non-Communist members.
In 2013 he was elected as an Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences. He was a leading figure in the movement to integrate and rationalise education in the Irish border region where he developed new governance structures. Kelly was well known in Ireland because of his work in merging schools with different traditions, and is known in UK university circles for his traditional view of the role of universities. As a student at Cambridge he famously cast doubt on the sincerity of a student discussion (on Irish politics) in a student society,Cambridge Apostles#Former members causing some offence.
In the 1440s he was a chaplain to Frederick III in Vienna, although was not a singer in the chapel but moved principally in various university circles. In the last years of his life he worked in Silesia: in 1448, he was at the episcopal court in Wrocław. In 1452 he traveled to Rome.See text by Małgorzata Kosińska on Piotr z Grudziądza While fewer than twenty of his works have survived, including Kyrie fons bonifitatis and the five-voice motet Panis / Panis / Pange / Patribus / Tantum, they can be securely attributed on account of containing acrostics of the composer's name.
Turabi's group served as "intermediaries" between Sudan and Saudi Arabia, whose port Jeddah was almost directly across the Red Sea only about 200 miles from Port Sudan and capable of hosting Saudi immigrant workers. Following the Arab Oil Embargo, Saudi had serious financial resources it could invest in the poor African country to discourage Communist influence. Throughout the Cold War, the organization benefited from the pro-Islamist support of Saudi Arabia. Saudi financial help for the NIF and its dominance of Islamic banking (which later meant all banking), gave them the means to transcend their original bases in intellectual and university circles.
It did not shy away from using profanity and denouncing the government. Along with Mexico City's The News, Unomásuno offered some of the most in-depth coverage of Mexico's environmental problems throughout the mid-1980s. It also tended to give more exposure to the views and statements of leaders from the now-extinct Mexican Workers' Party (PMT), the Unified Socialist Party of Mexico (PSUM), and their fusion party, the Socialist Mexican Party (PMS). Because of its pro-socialist articles, Unomásuno cultivated an image as the government's opposition across Mexico and grew in popularity in university circles.
In 1590, when she moved to Leiden, she lived in a house next to the Hortus Botanicus of Leiden University, where Clusius would take up his position as prefect and professor in 1593. In addition to Clusius, she formed associations with other scholars such as Lipsius and many likeminded noblewomen, including her sister, Louise de Coligny (widow of William I), Madame Brederode, Madame Matenesse, Madame DeFresne and Anne de Lalaing, widow of Willem de Hertaing, Seigneur de Marquette. Several of these women were also correspondents of Clusius, sharing an interest in botany regardless of religious difference. She used her influence at the court and in Leiden University circles, among other things, to provide Clusius with an appointment in Leiden.
His brother died two days before the Penn game, and Thomson returned home to Cadillac, Michigan to be with his family. When it was announced the Thomson would not play against Penn, The New York Times reported: "The announcement caused heavy gloom to spread through university circles, as it was said that Thompson's [sic] absence would remove the pivot of Michigan's offensive and defensive strength." At the end of the 1911 season, Thomson was selected as the first-team All-Western fullback both by Walter Eckersall in the Chicago Daily Tribune and by E. C. Patterson in Collier's Weekly. At the end of November 1911, the varsity letter winners from Michigan's 1911 team unanimously elected Thomson as the captain of the 1912 Michigan Wolverines football team.
And, at the outset itself, > he explains that mantram is not exclusive to the Hindu religion.... He signs > off by explaining how the mantram relates to a large body of spiritual > disciplines ... [and] is particularly careful to differentiate such > spiritual disciplines from dogmas. Also in The Hindu, M. P. Pandit wrote that as an > exponent of Eastern spiritual disciplines in the university circles in the > West, Eknath Easwaran has evolved a style that makes abstruse concepts > simple and appealing.... The author refutes the charge that the practice of > mantra is self-hypnosis. It is not that any word repeated for a length of > time will have the same results.... he explains mantra as 'that which > enables us to cross the sea of the mind.' Actually the traditional > derivation is mananat trayate, helps to cross the ocean of samsara.
Ideological Diversionism was not only a political or juridical term, since it also functioned, even before Raul Castro's speech in 1972, to police conducts and norms of everyday citizens and the production of culture, whether it was fashion, literature, or cinema. Most of the cultural production censored since the mid-1960s in Cuba - novels like Adire y el tiempo roto (1967) by Manuel Granados, and poetry books like Fuera del Juego (1968) by Heberto Padilla - were judged and accused from the paradigm of diversionism. It was in the university circles and groups were ideological diversionism was intensified as a hate speech against plural thinking of an array of social actors. As Mella or Alma Mater, two of the official publications of the University of Havana makes clear, the diversionist were from the "intellectualized student", who wore sandals, carry books by Jean-Paul Sartre and had homosexual conducts, to the bureaucrat, those interested in fashion or even those who would mimic The Beatles' haircuts (see figure 1.).
The dog gained fame among the university circles of Santiago, mainly in the universities of Santiago (Usach), Metropolitan of Technology (UTEM) and Central (Ucen). During the 2019 student protests Negro Matapacos became known for participating in the street marches and attacking members of Carabineros de Chile, which garnered the sympathies of the Chileans protesters Although Negro Matapacos was considered a stray dog, due to its presence in different university headquarters and streets of Santiago, he was under the care of María Campos, who adopted him in 2009 and who fed him, had a bed for him in her residence, and tied his handkerchiefs around his neck and also gave him a blessing before he went out. During his participation in street demonstrations, several media outlets also called him the "Chilean Loukanikos", due to his similarities with the dog that became famous during the protests in Greece between 2010 and 2012. Negro Matapacos died on August 26, 2017, attended by veterinary personnel and caregivers.

No results under this filter, show 17 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.