This is your brain on magic.
No one seems to care. Certainly, no one in the million dollar fund-raising cancer clinics are excited over the almost miraculous. . . record of. . . Krebiozen.
Maybe the raising of millions of dollars of funds for charitable projects has become 'a racket', and the longer they remain in the test-tube stage of development, the longer patronage and job payrollers remain in their soft berths.
. . . this charity. . . They quibble too much over procedures. . . while we seek a cure. They complain too loudly against another who, seemingly, has perfected a work that the public expects its charity dollars to do. Maybe we should investigate the American Cancer Society's operations.
. . Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, (is) the champion of the scientific doctrine of freedom of research, which has suffered in recent years through the falsity of certain politico-physician leaders of the AMA, who faked reports, suppressed honest information, brutally slugged the opposition, both physically and through pressures, used to prevent the truth about Krebiozen reaching the American people.
There's something wrong with a mother who washes out a measuring cup with soap and water after she's only measured water in it.
I do believe it's possible to play a lot without overplaying. It's when a musician becomes too self-centred that it becomes problematic. You need to be aware of how what you're doing is affecting everyone else, and that's something young musicians often forget. Playing in a band is a shared experience. It's about what everyone is doing together.
Language is not simply a reporting device for experience but a defining framework for it.
It is, of course, the merest truism to say a party is of use only so far as it serves the nation.