Public-minded

Pub´lic-mind`ed


a.1.Public-spirited.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
Manfredi have amassed an impressive portfolio of groundbreaking public-minded projects, from the Seattle Art Museum's Olympic Sculpture Park to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center.
A LARGE BANK IN BANGKOK, THAILAND, has shown how financial services institutions can market themselves as public-minded organizations by publicizing a "go green" campaign.
Dear Self: A Year in the Life of a Welfare Mother (NID Publishers, 978-0-9792281-0-0) is the 1973 journal of a Scorpio, a bowler, an avid reader, closet epileptic, public-minded letter writer, skeptic of relationships, and welfare recipient in New Britain, Connecticut.
The Southern also noted: "The informant also told authorities that during a sermon on homosexuality, Steele said he was willing to go to jail for his beliefs, prompting another line of questioning by the FBI." The public-minded informant apparently wanted to offer the pastor just that opportunity.
They want responsible, public-minded citizens but refuse to give civil society a chance.
We, therefore, need to put it in the public trust via the governm ent, not some ad hoc collection of public-minded Internet communities.