Word: marburger
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...ancient German town of Marburg, in a hillside villa overlooking the lazy River Lahn, lives a storm center of European Protestantism. Rudolf Karl Bultmann, 72, napping in his book-crammed study or limping through his grounds with his wife and daughter, does not look like an intellectual tornado. But in Germany, where ideas are apt to detonate like buzz bombs, sending shock waves through university faculties, student cafés and editorial rooms, the ideas of Rudolf Bultmann have set off a major furor...
...student winners, their fields, and their places of study follow: Ronald E. Miller, Economics, Ruprecht-Karl University, Heidlberg; Burton D. Hersh, Literature, Free University of Berlin, James Peale, Economics, University of Koeln; Roger N. Pierce, Philosophy, Phillips University, Marburg...
Meanwhile, Mrs. Pavla Pirecnik, released from Auschwitz, had returned to Yugoslavia and begun her search for her son. The International Refugee Organization found Ivan. Mrs. Pirecnik petitioned for his return and the I.R.O. brought the case to the U.S. court at Marburg...
...sunny. Near polling booths in bars and cafes beer flowed as on a special holiday. High on the Zugspitze vacationers took time to vote, and from Baltic beaches bathers ambled inland to cast their ballots. "It does not really make much difference who wins," said a German in Marburg, "as long as there is a big turnout...
Died. Dr. Otto Marburg, 74, exiled Viennese neurologist, longtime good friend of the late great Sigmund Freud; of cancer; in Manhattan. Author of several standard texts on the nervous system, Dr. Marburg had been head of the University of Vienna's Neurological Institute for 19 years when he came to the U.S. as a refugee in 1938, joined Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons as clinical professor of neurology...