Word: friedrich
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...were bodies everywhere." Hallery went to the infirmary where one of his friends lay nearing the end. "I know I'm finished," the friend said, "but I want you to tell my wife one thing. Tell her I had the joy of knowing the war is over." -- By Otto Friedrich. Reported by Michael Adler/Paris and Zona Sparks/New York
...China's leaders may have thought that they were following a different apostle, for Friedrich Nietzsche believed that "in forgiving and forgetting, things that have happened can be undone." But China has never stressed the "forgiving" part of Nietzsche's recipe. It is true that some "enemies" may have been "rehabilitated" after being accused of political crimes. (After the Cultural Revolution, both Deng Xiaoping and Zhao had their verdicts reversed.) But the Party's historical forgetting has tended to be selective and opportunistic. Not to be so readily forgotten (or forgiven) is the predatory history of the West toward China...
...occasionally his weakness, too - served well this time, and it would be difficult, even indecent, to reproach him for having offered free elections to the Iraqis." Will such acknowledgments be on display this week? "The people at the top know it's time to stop looking back," says Jan Friedrich Kallmorgen of the German Council on Foreign Relations. French analysts make similar noises. But that doesn't mean a new era is at hand. "The time for diplomacy is now," Rice says. And forever...
...Harvard Radcliffe Dramatic Club takes on nuclear physics this fall with student director Mike Donohue’s production this Cold War comedy by Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s. During a stay at a mental hospital three men who claim to be (and may in fact be) physicists Newton, Einstein, and Mobius, become involved in a web of murder, madness and feigned identity. Not to mention international espionage. Tickets $12, $8 for students available at the Harvard Box Office. Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., Thursday and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 2 p.m. Loeb...
...Harvard Radcliffe Dramatic Club takes on nuclear physics this fall with student director Mike Donohue’s production of this Cold War comedy by Friedrich Dürrenmatt. During a stay at a mental hospital three men who claim to be (and may in fact be) physicists Newton, Einstein, and Mobius, become involved in a web of murder, madness, and feigned identity—not to mention international espionage. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office $12, $8 for students. Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., Thursday and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 2 p.m. Loeb...