Word: hatefully
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...have been reading about the five missionaries killed by the Auca Indians in Ecuador [Jan. 23]. These young men were very fine people. However, let's look at the Indians' side of the story. The Aucas are well known to be Stone Age people, they hate all strangers, and don't want anyone coming into their territory. Why go in? These people have lived this way for hundreds of years, and I am sure the Lord must be interested in them just as they are. Let's use all our efforts to improve our own country...
...decade ago Samuel (Adagio for Strings) Barber wrote a piece of music for Dancer Martha Graham called Cave of the Heart. It dealt with a Medea-like woman whose consuming love turned to hate and revenge; the score followed the choreography closely in mood and motion. Last week Dimitri Mitropoulos and the Philharmonic-Symphony played Barber's recomposition of the same scenes, called Medea's Meditation and Dance of Vengeance. It turned out to be a meatier work for full symphony than as a dance accompaniment, with the same virtues-and the same faults-that have made Barber...
...flaw, since Dead Reckoning is a great if unintentional comedy. Most of the humor comes from double meanings and the ensuing snickers from the audience. The snickers become howls when Bogart gives his deadpan comments on ludicrous situations. (After an all-encompassing embrace with Lizabeth Scott he notes, "I hate every inch of her." And he should know...
...Eddie is first and foremost a politician. He doesn't hate the University, "and neither did my father. But the students make good reading for the voters. So, now and then I make a few speeches. Nothing to get excited about. Why, many's the student who's called me from jail in the middle of the night and whom I got out. And my father, don't forget, endowed a scholarship to send deserving boys through Harvard. No, what I'm out for is the vote. If the students help me get it, I'm willing...
Much of Wichita's musical revolution was achieved by Symphony Manager Alan Watrous, 55, who believes that a community must grow its own culture ("I hate that word, but what the devil else can you call it?") rather than buy it outside. A violinist and onetime music teacher, Manager Watrous has a special culture-growing formula: get the symphony and school system to work together. A string quartet of symphony players gives 80 concerts a year in schoolrooms. Twice a year, the orchestra plays student concerts at the rate of four a day-no buses shuttle one crowd...