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...Many Reds. Tito took good care of his prisoner. In grim Lepoglava Prison, Stepinac occupied a cell with an adjoining chapel, got good food and all the books he wanted. Unlike Hungary's Cardinal Mindszenty, Archbishop Stepinac issued no pronouncements against the regime. He sat silent, and in the free world his silence sounded as a cry of reproach. Tito would gladly have been rid of him. Through a U.S. newspaperman he offered him his freedom if he would agree never again to practice his priesthood in Yugoslavia. Replied Stepinac bluntly: "I am completely indifferent concerning any thoughts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Silent Voice | 2/22/1960 | See Source »

...friend shows up with a knife, Shaw stirs up enough plot to feed parts to an army of extras, expertly guides readers through a movie-colonist's Rome, febrile with sex and chicanery. He sauces his book with piquant if dubious notions, e.g., that the Sistine Chapel proves that Michelangelo's only God was Michelangelo. But like children tottering with grown-up luggage, his characters never seem large enough for the emotions they are forced to carry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Middle of the Journey | 2/1/1960 | See Source »

...Anglican priest and took the chaplaincy of Trinity College, Oxford (1912), Knox was a "Romanizer." He was attracted to the rituals, vestments, "Mariolatrous hymns" and incense that his father among others was bent on stamping out. As a family joke Ronald once scented his father's private chapel with incense. Wrote Knox: "I can't feel that the Church of England is an ultimate solution...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Life & Death of a Monsignor | 1/25/1960 | See Source »

Several of Princeton University's Southern alumni are criticizing the scheduled appearance of the Reverend Martin Luther King in that university's chapel, it was learned yesterday. King, a Negro integration leader, spoke in Cambridge earlier this month without any reported incidents of popular disfavor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Princeton's Southern Alumni Attack Slated Visit of Martin Luther King | 1/22/1960 | See Source »

Ernest Gordon, Dean of the Princeton Chapel, is still upholding the invitation to King. Supported by President Robert F. Goheen, Gordon defended his right as dean to have a "free pulpit" and to invite whomever he pleased to speak. Gordon also denied that King was a revolutionary, and cited him instead as having "prevented a revolution from taking place." He called King's views "thoroughly Christian...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Princeton's Southern Alumni Attack Slated Visit of Martin Luther King | 1/22/1960 | See Source »

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