Word: heidelberg
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...premiere in Leipzig, its jazzy score and slangy libretto, combined with Nazi-inspired resentment of its Jewish composer and its left-wing theme, touched off one of the worst riots in the history of the German theater. Rarely performed since then, Mahagonny was revived last week by the Heidelberg Municipal Theater in a stark and moving production...
After getting an A.B. at Yale, he briefly tried selling real estate (he flopped), went to Harvard to try for a Ph.D. in English. He started a thesis on the origin of genders, worked two years before he found that a student at Heidelberg had long since done the subject with unimprovable thoroughness. "I mouth the strange syllables of ten forgotten languages, letting my spirits fail, my youth pass," he youthfully wrote. Then a roommate, Australian Bacteriologist Hugh Ward, introduced John Enders to Hans Zinsser, Harvard University's professor of bacteriology and immunology, and one of the great fertilizing...
Drummed out of his command of the 24th Infantry Division on charges of playing partisan politics, Major General Edwin A. Walker, 51, wallowed for five months in a colonel's billet at U.S. European Army headquarters in Heidelberg. But last week came word of his release from Pentagon purgatory and reassignment to Hawaii, where he will become assistant chief of staff for training and operations in the Pacific-a prestigious post indicating that the combat-proved Texan still had a shot at a third star...
...clergyman is trying to lead his church back to recognition of the authority of the Roman Catholic Pope and to the restitution of much Catholic liturgy and theology-while yet preserving the Lutheran Church's identity. For this stand. Dr. Hans Christian Asmussen, 63, who now lives in Heidelberg, has lost his big former parish in Kiel. Yet the trend that he espouses is so strong that almost every German city now has churches where Lutherans can go to confession...
...Heidelberg suffered no physical damage in World War II, and it reopened in 1945 with shabby, thoughtful veterans-both Germans and U.S. G.I.s. Today it has more foreign students (1,500 last semester) than any other German university. Biggest detachment: 313 Americans, most of them medical students. "Some of them may be odd in the American sense of the word, or lone wolves," says one professor. "But they are all wide awake and intelligent-the kind of student a European professor likes. They are more critical than our students, always ask questions and work very hard...