Word: concerns
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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There is art in The Garden of Eden; there is also evidence of many artifacts. Hemingway began the book after World War II. In 1947 he wrote the critic Maxwell Geismar, "Getting very big but I cut the hell out of it periodically." Just how big became the concern of Scribners Editor Tom Jenks, 35, who got the job of salvaging a 247-page novel out of 1,500 pages of manuscript. "Editing Hemingway was like wrestling with a god," says the amiable Virginian. What Jenks does not say is that the rules of the game require that...
...hope we now have the full story of the letter and those involved in preparing it. But Bok and the Harvard administration's attitude toward the entire campaign for the board by these three alumni hardly leaves us with much confidence in the University's concern for the Harvard community...
...that a number of Jewish gay and lesbian students find their way to Hillel, it must be acknowledged that there are in all likelihood many more such students whose assumptions about a negative reception preclude their even walking through the door. It was in part a response to this concern that the Hillel staff sponsored two programs focused on issues of importance to the gay community this spring. Doing so was not an easy decision. There are, after all, within our community those who find it in good conscience impossible to accept homosexuality as a moral option. There are also...
...priest living and working among young people, "fidelity to the human person" translates into concern for persons as individuals. Students who walk through the doors of St. Paul's or the Catholic Student Center are not homosexuals or heterosexuals, but individual persons. When one of them says "Father, I'm gay and having a difficult time knowing where I stand with the Church" or "My roommate is homosexual and I'm confused about what to say or do" the first and most basic thing that needs to be addressed is this person, his pain or anger, her confusion or bewilderment...
...from Tokyo rainwater to fresh milk. Though the government advised people that no danger existed, demand for powdered milk soared, and some stores ran out of it. "We are not going to drink milk as long as it is contaminated," said one frightened homemaker. Yet most Japanese showed little concern. "There is no sense of a growing crisis here," said Noriaki Hosokawa, 32, a Tokyo importer of windsurfing equipment. "Not a single friend of mine is worried about radiation...