Word: matthew
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...still might have become a good man." "I quit running at 95." "It was just as pleasant as a good restaurant." Who said which? These quotes, out of this week's TIME, were said (but not in the same order) by Jawaharlal Nehru, Pavel Popovich, Amos Alonzo Stagg, Matthew J. Culligan, Douglas MacArthur, Niccoló Tucci and Dwight Eisenhower. One way to find out is to try to match the quote with the speaker. Another way is to read this week's TIME...
...official anthem of Ghana's youth movement, the 500,000-strong Young Pioneers, who are the pride of President Kwame Nkrumah. Though all Ghanaians are now accustomed to adulation of Ghana's Osagyefo (Redeemer), the indoctrination of small children with such a parody of Christian teaching (Matthew 4:19) was too much for the Right Rev. Richard Roseveare, 60, Anglican Bishop of Accra. Fortnight ago, the bishop rose before a Christian gathering in Cape Coast to declare solemnly. "It is a truism to say that the future will be in the hands of the boys and girls...
Hippocrates once said that "a physician without a knowledge of astrology has no right to call himself a physician," and the Magi of St. Matthew's Gospel who followed the star to Bethlehem were astrologers. The Roman Catholic Church today condemns serious belief in astrology as a grave sin; but as a man of his time, the great St. Thomas Aquinas held that "the celestial bodies are the cause of all that takes place in the sublunar world." Among modern believers, the worst advertisement is Adolf Hitler, who had five astrologers charting a course for him. Perhaps the most...
...called the Advanced Studies Program, is a pioneering blend of noblesse oblige and intelligent economics. For 102 years, the wealthy Episcopal bastion in Concord, N.H., shut tight each summer, sending its boys home for three months. This did not seem right to St. Paul's rector, the Rev. Matthew M. Warren, 54, who thought there must be some way to use those empty classrooms and dormitories. He decided to open them to the best young brains of rural, frugal New Hampshire, where no public high school yet offers Russian, calculus, advanced biology, chemistry or physics...
...Died. Matthew Cvetic, 53, who from 1941 to 1950 led a double life as Communist conspirator and FBI counterspy; of a heart attack; in Hollywood. Losing friends and distressing his family, Cvetic organized cells in Western Pennsylvania, attended more than 2,000 party meetings and joined some 75 Communist-front groups. His testimony later led to the Smith Act conviction of Steve Nelson, union leader and top Communist organizer in Pittsburgh, as well as to a career as author and movie subject (I Was a Communist for the F.B.I...