Word: expression
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...opinion, the National and English Review, under the byline of its young editor Lord Altrincham, a peer of the realm and a Tory, they evoked a howl of indignant response all over the nation. "Lord Altrincham's attack is vulgar," cried Lord Beaverbrook's Tory Daily Express. "Being muddleheaded, it is destructive." "Disgraceful," complained the League of Empire Loyalists. "Altrincham ought to be shot," groused the Duke of Argyll...
...That the young in those countries, blinkered and intellectually constricted from birth, should nevertheless express these needs is, in my belief, yet another manifestation of the workings of the law of nature or, as it became known in medieval times...
...petition that accused the board of denying the "right of all men to freedom of speech and the right to voice opinions." By week's end the storm had spread far beyond the borders of the campus. Said the conservative Beaumont Enterprise: "The practice of firing teachers who express opinions on pertinent questions of the day can become a vicious and monstrous thing in any state...
...bishop of Southwell, Dr. F. R. Barry, who consecrated the church, refused to be moved by the screaming headline in the London Daily Express (MADONNA WITH AN ETON CROP) or by what he saw in the panels. Said he: "The New Testament is translated into modern English. Why not into modern art?" After all, other artists in recent years have placed scenes from the Christian drama in Bethlehem, Conn., Haiti, India and a Nazi concentration camp. And the same incidents were painted in modern dress by Byzantine, Romanesque and Renaissance artists...
...ideas with fellow executives and moderators, and a round of lectures, concerts and other cultural activities. The round-table discussions may start as one did last week, high in the abstractions of Aristotelian logic, and plunge hotly down into a labor-management debate on productivity. Executives are encouraged to express their views vigorously, apply the ideas culled from their readings to the present world of business and politics. Discussions often run over into the exercise room or into the sauna (Finnish bath), where Philosopher Adler last week led a lively argument on justice and charity in 175° heat. Only...