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Word: chidingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...issue should not be obscured but made clear; accepted on its own merits. There is no question that he, if anyone, was most qualified to argue the case before the Administration. (Currently, a novel of his is being read by Houghton and Mifflin.) Wiley remembers how Armah could "tease, chide, and coerce within the space of a few minutes. The experience of talking with him left many quite shaken." The question for AAAAS came to be one of "On whose terms will we be recognized?" Armah was unable to communicate the new concept to the Administration...

Author: By Harold A. Mcdougall, | Title: AAAAS: Negro Students Test Liberalism | 6/15/1967 | See Source »

...issue should not be obscured but made clear; accepted on its own merits. There is no question that he, if anyone, was most qualified to argue the case before the Administration. (Currently, a novel of his is being read by Houghton and Mifflin.) Wiley remembers how Armah could "tease, chide, and coerce within the space of a few minutes. The experience of talking with him left many quite shaken." The question for AAAAS came to be one of "On whose terms will we be recognized?" Armah was unable to communicate the new concept to the Administration...

Author: By Harold A. Mcdougall, | Title: Negro Students' Challenge to Liberalism | 5/31/1967 | See Source »

...private experience. The Rev. Stephen Rose, editor of Chicago's Renewal magazine, argues that "whenever the prophetic word breaks in, either as judgment or as premise, that's when the historical God acts." One such situation, he suggests, was Watts?an outburst of violence that served to chide men for lack of brotherhood. Harvard's Harvey Cox sees God's hand in history, but in a different way. The one area where empirical man is open to transcendence, he argues, is the future: man can be defined as the creature who hopes, who has taken responsibility for the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theology: Toward a Hidden God | 4/8/1966 | See Source »

...objectivity is Utopian. Can the music of any composer maintain its integrity after passing through the living complex-sanguine or phlegmatic-of this or that interpreter?" But at the same time an artist must not go out of bounds, warns Landowska, reminded of the time Gounod had to chide his wife at a funeral: "Be careful; do not cry louder than the widow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Visionary Musician | 12/25/1964 | See Source »

...most of our friends have noted, each of the Presidential candidates was, at best, the lesser of two evils. So what was there to do but chide ourselves as ineffectual intellectuals as we stopped traffic while entering to grow in wisdom...

Author: By Paul Williams, | Title: The Best Man | 11/4/1964 | See Source »

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