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

...depicts a reality very different from life's reality. Time is frozen in a photograph; continuous in life. The experience of photography involves only one sense; the experience of life involves all. Such differences between photographic reality and actual reality lead Sontag to conclude that "surrealism is at the heart of the photographic enterprise"--not in the sense of the glib, self-conscious surrealism of one branch of photography, but in the very activity of presenting a reality of a very different order from conventional reality, a reality apprehended through a different scheme of time and sense. Sontag finds...

Author: By Cliff Sloan, | Title: Images of the World | 4/21/1968 | See Source »

TIME is at heart a magazine of ideas expressed in words, but our editors pursue the right pictures with as much intensity as they use in their search for the best language. Simply stated, the purpose of the 70 or so black and white pictures that we usually run is to enhance the vitality and meaning of the stories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Apr. 19, 1968 | 4/19/1968 | See Source »

...Martin Luther King was murdered because he was our uncomfortable conscience. I am filled with shame and loathing for my race. My heart grieves for his family and friends who must abruptly substitute memories for his warm reality. My mind cries out to know how I, one single me, insulated in my white suburb, can redress the ancient wrongs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Apr. 19, 1968 | 4/19/1968 | See Source »

Died. Harold Babcock, 86, pioneer astronomer credited with discovering periodic reversals in the sun's magnetic field; of a heart attack; in Pasadena, Calif. Babcock was in semiretirement in 1958 when he noticed the reversals, theorized they would occur every eleven years and would change the shape of sunspots, dark areas on the solar surface that cause magnetic storms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Apr. 19, 1968 | 4/19/1968 | See Source »

...their zone to try to restore auto production and employment in the depressed Wolfsburg area of Lower Saxony. Had the British foreseen how Nordhoff would drive their own cars off the export markets, they might never have given him the job. By last week, when Nordhoff died of a heart attack at 69, Wolfsburg had grown from a hamlet to a bustling city of 85,000 as home base for West Germany's largest industry. With assembly plants from Africa to Australia, the bug was the new Model T, a ubiquitous symbol of the West German economic resurrection. Although...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Manufacturing: Builder of the Bug | 4/19/1968 | See Source »

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