Word: cam
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...therefore literally be said that Jesus died for Jesus as well as for mankind, and it can be mythologically assumed that Christ and Barabbas are brothers. The script explicitly conceives Barabbas as the dark brother of Christ, the natural as opposed to the spiritual man, a counterpart to Cam and perhaps even to the Hermes of the alchemists. But in a religious sense the picture presents Barabbas as something more immediate, obligatory and dreadful He is the reality of religion in this world His life, as the film describes it. is the holy and unholy, horrible and wonderful story...
...enormous (3,500-seat) tent erected for the occasion, the bands played weekends-from early afternoon until early the next morning. Among those present: 40 emotional Italians of the Corpo Musicale del Dopolavoro Fer-roviario of Milan who nearly blasted the $40,000 tent to pieces with Cam Amati, a musical description of attacking Italian tanks in World War II; three bands of sardine fishermen and rice workers from Portugal, who traveled almost two weeks by bus in order to perform for two days at Kerkrade; the band of the tiny town of Eijsden, Holland, which was accompanied...
...overstated the case by calling the medicare bill socialized medicine. Kennedy equated its opposition with callous disregard of elders' health. He bluntly said that he would get his way no matter what Congress did, and by insisting that medicare would be a partisan issue in the fall cam paign, solidified Republican opposition to it. To many - including some in his own party - he seemed to be more interested in a political issue than in a bill...
...teach her lesson, Mrs. Kellogg cam paigns ceaselessly against coloring books, against "art lessons" before the age of ten, against art teachers who reward copying and discourage imagination, and against the parent's temptation to cry out: "It's a man!" "All children are natural artists," Mrs. Kellogg says, "so why not let them be? Their art has a natural esthetic qual ity. All of it is beautiful, and none of it is ugly...
...Sophocles and Shakespeare in a library built by Christopher Wren. Soon scientists and classicists are sunk in shabby armchairs before gasping gas heaters, sipping sherry with their tutors. All around them is a happy blend of past and future: the green-lawned beauty of college "backs" on the River Cam, the sounds of Cantabs cheering on rowers with "Forward Christs!"-a way of life and learning that wears its seven centuries as jauntily as the modern undergraduate's motto: "I'm all right, Jack...