Word: creation
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...message was also sent to Polish students last week in connection with the creation of Wladyslaw Gomulka's national communist government. The note expressed congratulations for the goals which were realized in the change, and wished success to the students in their attempts to construct an educational system controlled from within Poland...
More realistic animation is successfully combined with the sound tract when Stravinsky's Rite of Spring sets the tempo for the creation of Earth, and the growth of life upon it, including a battle between two prehistoric monsters. In contrast, Disney parodies Ponchielli's "Dance of the Hours" in a fine comic ballet of elephants, hippotamuses, alligators and ostriches...
...with the death of Isaac. Abraham breaks under the accusation that he destroyed his son in a sacrifice to his own ambition. Abraham's collapse is total and brings him to murder, the most abominable crime: "Who has to take a life stands alone on the edge of creation. Only God can understand him then...
...make the common market more than a dream. At a meeting in Messina, Sicily their economic experts drew up plans for a customs union that, from the trade point of view, would convert the six into a single "country" with no internal tariffs and common external tariffs. Since creation of such a union would have a drastic effect on the economy of other European powers, the 17-nation Organization for European Economic Cooperation last July established a working group to investigate the possibility of welding all O.E.E.C. nations into a common market area...
...Renaissance masters, details of flowers and fruits were like armor and rich fabrics-just opportunities to show off their technical virtuosity. Their great central passages focused on what they deemed to be nature's sublime creation: man. But through the centuries the viewpoint has changed. Today still life has become for many artists an intimate proving ground for their own vision and expression. The very fact that the inanimate objects grouped together are from everyday life provides the challenge to infuse them with what one of the greatest still-life painters, Paul Cézanne* called "an impulse that...