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Word: deathe (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

During the campaign, Hampton also accused Lowenstein of advocating the legalization of marijuana, although Lowenstein did not in fact do so. Hampton proposed the death penalty for dealers, and life imprisonment for use of the drug, and his supporters often went down to the Lowenstein headquarters in Rockville Centre and asked students working there, "Do you really smoke...

Author: By Carol R. Sternhell, | Title: Al Lowenstein Goes To Congress | 11/9/1968 | See Source »

These essays reflect Camus' search for the ideas about love, life, death and despair that distinguish his later work. Like Goethe, who on his deathbed cried out for light, Camus also desperately searched for light. For him, it was a twofold love, intellectual and physical-the blinding flash of passionate insight into man, and the life-giving caress of the Mediterranean...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Intellectual Sensualist | 11/8/1968 | See Source »

...same time so detached from myself and so present in the world." Yet, despite this lyrical sensualism, it was Camus' beiief in an intellectual revolt (after facing "the absurd") that most renewed and sustained his bat tle against the "quivering wings" of a suicidal death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Intellectual Sensualist | 11/8/1968 | See Source »

...easy. For one thing, some of the labels are at least partly true. Cancer makes for strange ward-fellows. The inmates of Solzhenitsyn's ward include men and women from the farthest reaches of the Soviet Union -peasants, ex-prisoners, exiles, bureaucrats, students. When confronted with death, they express jagged-and politically damning-insights into the everyday enormities of life as it had been under Joseph Stalin. Perhaps most shocking are the flashbacks of a powerful party functionary, now suffering from cancer of the throat, who recalls denouncing a friend to the secret police so that he might acquire...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Remission from Fear | 11/8/1968 | See Source »

...champion of democratic values in the Communist world, a courageous attacker of evils peculiar to Stalinism. But he is much more. Stripped of ah illusions by years of war, prison, exile, poverty and sickness, the Solzhenitsyn figure uncompromisingly asserts that modern man can arm himself against the fear of death only with life itself. He must do so by reducing life to complete simplicity, seeing it with unblinking honesty but loving and prizing it nevertheless. If Solzhenitsyn is against cruelty, hypocrisy and loss of freedom, he is also against the distracting things that freedom-with its consequent financial inequality-engenders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Remission from Fear | 11/8/1968 | See Source »

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