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Every religion believes in some form of soul, or animating principle of life. But the fact that none of them ever defined it satisfactorily seemed to bother James Kidd, an eccentric Arizona copper miner whose lifetime interest was the explanation of the supernatural. Kidd mysteriously disappeared in 1949, and was declared legally dead in 1965. Arizona authorities found among his possessions a handwritten will in which the prospector directed that his estate, consisting of stocks and bonds worth $198,138.53, be used for "research or some scientific proof of a soul of the human body which leaves at death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theology: Searching for the Soul | 6/23/1967 | See Source »

Newest discovery is "Brutalist" Norbert Tadeusz, son of a Polish-descended Dortmund coal miner; only one year out of the Düsseldorfs liberal Academy of Fine Arts, he has already been represented in nine shows, become a collector's favorite. Tadeusz' teacher, Joseph Beuys, is also out of the ordinary. A onetime Hitler Youth and World War II Stuka pilot, Beuys has undergone a characteristic postwar metamorphosis to become Düsseldorfs reigning neo-Dada hero. He is celebrated for his Chaplinesque smile, battered Homburg, octopuslike drawings, sculptures made of chocolate and lard, for the splendiferous happenings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Artists: Paris on the Rhine | 6/2/1967 | See Source »

Lamont is survived by his wife, the former Elinor B. Miner; two sons, Edward '48 and Lansing '52; a daughter, Mrs. Andrew (Elinor Branscombe) Anderson-Bell; and two brothers, Austin '27 and Corliss...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Thomas Lamont '21 Dies, Was Corporation Fellow | 4/11/1967 | See Source »

...Congress consists of 100 Senators and 435 Representatives from every state and every social background, ranging from millionaire to former coal miner. There is no reason to assume that this body includes a greater number of crooks than any other comparable sample of 535 Americans. But is that good enough? The U.S. voter takes a fairly cynical view of politicians, more or less expecting them to be up to their campaign buttons in patronage and various forms of skulduggery. But at the same time, he also expects (or wants) them to be above the more blatant forms of corruption. That...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: CONGRESSIONAL ETHICS: Who Can Afford to Be Honest? | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...more than Loyola did Luther want to divide Christianity; for at least half of his life he was an unquestioningly loyal, devout Catholic, remarkable for his devotion in an age better known by its sinners than its saints. Born in 1483, the son of a Saxon miner, Luther had every intention of becoming a lawyer until, one day in 1505, he was caught in a sudden storm while walking toward the village of Stotternheim. A bolt of lightning knocked him to the ground, and Luther, terrified, called out to the church's patroness of miners: "St. Anne, help...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Protestants: Obedient Rebel | 3/24/1967 | See Source »

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