Word: dearest
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...does not understand, but perhaps her lover does, perhaps the artist does. He turns away, obscurely and wonderfully consoled and strengthened, as if in the experience he had found his muse again, had sipped at the dearest freshness of the spring of life itself...
...that these weapons changed him from a vegetarian into a successful predator and allowed him to develop into true, big-brained man. On this narrow foundation, Ardrey builds a wide-swinging theory that man, including modern man, is naturally a killer and that weapons are his creator and his dearest love. Writes Ardrey: "Man emerged and triumphed over his rival primates for this single reason-he was a killer . . . Man takes deeper delight in his weapons than in his women. He will pledge a treasury to the one; a pittance to the other. Nor have the failures of nations...
...Masao Takenaka, 36, professor of Christian social ethics at Kyoto's Doshisha University, deplored the prevalence of what he called the four Ds of Christianity: "divided, dependent, derived and dated." Cried he: "I cannot conscientiously sell such Christianity to my dearest friends. Modern man is sick and tired of hearing propaganda. He is anxious to meet people who will participate in his struggle. I feel the presence of Christians in the secular world is very important." Dr. Takenaka brought up a problem that was raised again and again among the younger churches-that of making Christianity indigenous...
...dearest dear." sang the baritone to the soprano at West Berlin's Deutsche Opera Berlin last week, "a triumph awaits you." As a prophet, Baritone Thomas Stewart was only half right. For their roles in Composer Giselher Klebe's opera Alkmene, a modern version of the Amphitryon legend, triumph awaited both Texas-born Stewart and his wife. Brooklyn-born Soprano Evelyn Lear. Raved the influential Frankfurter Algemeine: "What Evelyn Lear as Alkmene and Thomas Stewart as Jupiter attained belongs among the most glorious achievements in all Berlin opera...
...Mason's attack on the practice in segregationist states of keeping Negro physicians from full membership in county societies and keeping them out of hospitals. A little bitterly, Dr. Mason urged the A.M.A. to discipline local societies that discriminate against the Negro physician. On this topic, perhaps dearest to the heart of Negro doctors, A.M.A.'s President Larson had nothing...