The mid-century domestic political upheavals in France altered the pace and nature of the French colonial impact in North Africa. |
|
In mid-century America, it was against the law for a pension fund to invest all but a small part of its portfolio in stocks. |
|
A different social dimension was introduced mid-century with Ruskin's passionate advocacy of liberal art education. |
|
By the mid-century the institutions, markets and practices we associate with cultural production were firmly established. |
|
By mid-century the Federal Reserve System had become a bona fide central bank with headquarters in Washington. |
|
The expansion of agricultural land and farm numbers continued well into the 1900s, but by mid-century both trends had been reversed. |
|
The French landscape artists of the mid-century are also accorded their proper place here. |
|
Historical genre was gradually eclipsed by scenes from a semi-imaginary Orient, a reflection of the colonialism of the mid-century. |
|
She noted that the schemes of the mid-century urban planners could not have destroyed neighborhoods better if they had been designed to do so. |
|
Clashes continued, as it proved impossible in peacetime to reduce the burden of taxes first justified by the demands of mid-century wars. |
|
There is almost no trace of mid-century Western art in any museum in Russia. |
|
It is hard to envision any stable European system emerging to replace the one finally buried in these last of the mid-century wars. |
|
Like any Southern California Modernist, Schmidt reveres Neutra's mid-century architecture. |
|
The therapist had placed a couple of flickering tea lights on top of her mid-century Scandi coffee table. |
|
By mid-century, the stethoscope had been joined by the ophthalmoscope and laryngoscope, the thermometer and spirometer. |
|
Between 1830 and mid-century, colonial licensing laws were repealed, temporary, or rarely enforced. |
|
The king was anxious to appear as the serene restorer of order after the domestic chaos of mid-century. |
|
After the advent of photography in the mid-century, magic lanterns were increasingly produced and sold primarily for domestic use. |
|
There was a time at mid-century when maligning the mother took a more generalized form. |
|
By the mid-century much of the trade between the colonies was being carried in foreign ships, and largely to the benefit of foreign merchants. |
|
|
The serial and atonal composers vehemently brought this issue forward in mid-century. |
|
Lucy was taught by studio linguists to speak in a mid-century, mid-Atlantic accent. |
|
The magazine is for ranch home and tract house owners who like mid-century modern style. |
|
But at least until mid-century, Tudor ambitions remained focused on reviving traditional English claims to the crown of France. |
|
The mid-century wars had generated much patriotic rhetoric in praise of Britishness. |
|
Salvatore's study is both rich and deep, and promises to become the standard work on rural Argentina in the mid-century. |
|
The second major part includes essays related to the mid-century charismatic movement in traditional Protestant denominations. |
|
Its graceful pentameter couplets express the mid-century fascination with theatrical performance. |
|
The Polynesian craze of mid-century America has made a comeback in fashion, collectibles, interior decor and art. |
|
Yet such neo-traditionalist frou-frou has no place in mid-century homes, no matter how drastically revamped. |
|
By mid-century there were five potteries there, and a number of potters had migrated west to establish their own kilns. |
|
This is an honorable and compulsively fascinating evening that disproves the notion that the playwright is merely a witty chronicler of mid-century, middle-class life. |
|
But that was not at all how this chubby foreigner was celebrated by a contemporary mid-century Washington press corps. |
|
The rise of anthropology concurrent with Darwin's work on evolution mid-century and the Oxbridge university reform commissions decisively altered British activity. |
|
By mid-century there should be more than three million centenarians, one in five people will be over 65-and many of them will have to keep on working for economies to survive. |
|
By the mid-century, the market for paintings had been firmly established. |
|
By mid-century, Spanish galleons loaded with treasure sailed annually for Europe, becoming prey to pirates, many of them English, based in the Bahamas. |
|
In emphasizing the political semiotics of mid-century popular culture, James resisted the temptation to condemn or champion all of its emanations. |
|
Until past mid-century, pastors of this congregation usually had brief tenures and some reflected the youthful immaturity and arrogance of W. B. Johnson. |
|
By mid-century the rivers were thick with flatboats and keelboats. |
|
|
Paul Rand and Alvin Lustig, the twin titans of mid-century American graphic design. |
|
In the mid-century, the Irish Republican Brotherhood and the Fenians began a genuinely separatist movement, whose support in Irish elections was rarely measured. |
|
By mid-century, inroads were also being made into the near infrared. |
|
All schools that last have alums, and, ancient as it was by American standards, Trinity by mid-century had thousands. |
|
The Dark should logically offer the perfect anatomization of the stable relations between men in Ireland at the mid-century. |
|
On the other side of the thermostat, but equally local in subject matter, was Giorgio Morandi, the native Bolognian and mid-century painter of bottles and tins. |
|
White's description of early truck logging complicates the argument by historians of BC forestry that mid-century mechanization meant the deskilling of forest work. |
|