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Love for the "ultimate reality" is even harder to come by. Such abstractions, Garnett points out, are at best concerned only with what God means to humans-not what humans mean to God. And hu mans need the love that is agape, not eros-"concerned not merely with what the other means to us but with what we, in our lives, may mean to the other, whether he has joy in us, or sorrow, whether we serve him or disappoint...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Nature of God | 6/9/1961 | See Source »

China's Instrumental Heritage (Professor Liang Tsai-ping and Group; Lyri-chord). A fascinating collection of Chinese folk songs, dating from the yth to 18th centuries and played on such authentic instruments as the zitherlike cheng, the hsiao ('vertical flute), and the nan-hu (violin). The wiry melodic lines, wavering and falling away, have the delicate but hypnotic fascination of ancient Chinese watercolors, and the songs have subjects to match: Wild Geese Alighting on the Sandy Shore, The Spring River in the Flowery Moonlight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Classical Records: Mar. 24, 1961 | 3/24/1961 | See Source »

...Hu Shih, China's most eminent scholar and a former Chinese Nationalist Ambassador to the U.S., bustled between Washington and New York, demanding an open civil trial for Lei Chen. Dr. Hu is a close friend of Chiang Kaishek, but at the same time he is also a leading exponent of Formosa's need for a responsible opposition. Other overseas Chinese took up the cudgels. In Hong Kong the British-owned China Mail said angrily that Lei's arrest proved that "free speech is as dangerous in Formosa as it was shown to be during the Hundred...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FORMOSA: Dismounting a Tiger | 10/3/1960 | See Source »

Proud, intemperate Lei Chen, who had hitherto been a relatively obscure figure, found himself famous overnight throughout Formosa and in Chinese colonies abroad. Respected Scholar Hu Shih came to Lei's defense, called him "a patriotic man and certainly an anti-Communist." From the publisher of San Francisco's Chinese World, President Chiang Kai-shek received a cable deploring Lei's arrest as "one of the great mistakes of your career." And even within Chiang's government there were those who doubted the wis dom of the move. For by this blunder, the Nationalists stood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FORMOSA: How to Make a Martyr | 9/19/1960 | See Source »

Most important, the Chinese feel that Formosa must become a truly thriving outpost of intellectual freedom for all of Asia. Said Dr. Hu, as he summed up the opportunity: "I believe I am justified to conclude that the men now in control of the Chinese mainland are still afraid of the spirit of freedom, the spirit of independent thinking, the courage to doubt, and the spirit and method of evidential thinking I believe the tradition of the humanistic and rationalistic China has not been destroyed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Guarding a Tradition | 7/25/1960 | See Source »

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