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...forbidden to come to Czestochowa by Gomulka but nevertheless celebrated his own private millennial Mass in a small chapel among the grottoes of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, before a replica of Czestochowa's renowned Black Madonna...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poland: We Stand on Calvary | 5/13/1966 | See Source »

...dimness of the University of Chicago's Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, pretty Coed Susan Alberi, 18, passed her fellow worshiper a note. Would he please kneel in prayer? With a smile, he complied. "He thought I was trying to pick him up," Susan recounts gleefully. "Instead I choked him with my rosary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Games: Homicide on the Campus | 5/13/1966 | See Source »

...potential advertisers, competently survey the high points of the current Boston gallery scene. David Howard's interesting and well written essay on Aesthetics With-in Social Form calls attention to the fascinating relationship between the cultural structure of a community and the aesthetic environment in which it exists. Chip Chapel's interview of Alcalay, Georgians, Neuman, which follows Howard's article, is also first-rate...

Author: By Jonathan D. Finebero, | Title: The Harvard Art Review | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

Renaissance Man. Boyish enthusiasm sits poorly on a professor, but an urgency and eagerness that transcend enthusiasm can be gripping. At the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, English Professor Osborne Bennett ("O.B.") Hardison Jr., 37, wears scuffed shoes, drooping socks and chalk-streaked jacket, goes everywhere accompanied by a kindly dog named Poppo, and makes literature an urgent affair. O.B. revels in Joyce, turns Kant dramatic, convulses his class by acting out John Donne's poem The Flea. Hummingly in tune with the student wave length, he translates the oracle's prediction in Arcadia ("An uncouth love which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Teaching: To Profess with a Passion | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

...Growing in Unity." Pope Paul VI and the 100th Archbishop of Canterbury met in a site suitable to the historicity of the encounter: the Sistine Chapel, where Popes are chosen and, upon death, rest in state. Beneath the fading colors of Michelangelo's vision of the Last Judgment, Paul and Canterbury sat on identical red brocade and gilt chairs. Canterbury addressed the Pope as "Your Holiness, dear brother in Christ," and as his main point said: "It is only as the world sees us Christians growing visibly in unity that it will accept through us the divine message...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Christianity: The Kiss of Peace | 4/1/1966 | See Source »

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