Word: moralizes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...McAllister Ingersoll, managing editor of FORTUNE, general manager of Time Inc. and later publisher of TIME, also quarreled with Luce politically, but more often about publishing matters. In 1938 Hitler was chosen to be TIME'S Man of the Year (the criterion, as always, was news impact not moral worth). Since no adequate color photograph was available, TIME had to settle for a rather innocuous picture of Hitler in khaki. Brooding over this, Ingersoll replaced it at the last minute with a lithograph of Hitler playing a devil's organ from which hung his naked victims. Luce...
...addition to matters of art, Bellow focuses his highly trained and intensely moral intelligence on questions of public responsibility and the possibilities of democracy. The force that his work exerts, however, comes not from political ideology, psychology or poetics, but from a resilient curiosity that encloses a molten core of doubt. What is man? How can he best manage his intellect and instincts? Those are the questions that spur Bellow's fictional quests. He finds no satisfying answers, but his special genius for characterization has progressively narrowed the distance between man's definition of himself and what...
...will focus its attention on the specific problems of removing academic credit, touching only peripherally on the moral question that the HUC resolution raised...
...would be honest with my sons, as my sons are with me. I would then tell--in the time honored and annoying tradition of parents--that morality and reality are frequently out of phase, and that the moral issue is complex when the opponent is prepared to be immoral. But having talked with and listened to many students, I could also tell him that there is a new generation in the United States and many other countries which rejects the old premises of war and diplomacy. They want to see more emphasis placed on human and personal values. And they...
Expanded family planning service to permit couples all over the world to space their children is a moral, economic, ecological and demographic necessity. I consider this one of our most pressing public responsibilities. There is no question that with proper legislative authority and funding, we can enhance the freedom of choice of American women to plan the size of their families and the spacing of their children. I am committed to this goal and I think it is a feasible one that will have important impact on child health and reduction of infant mortality. It must however, be a part...