Word: prided
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Nazi era. So far, at least, it consists of an increased self-confidence and a growing concern with national purpose. Unsettling though it may be for a watching world, this awakening was, as Willy Brandt said not long ago, "as inevitable as the sunrise. No people can live without pride...
...hardly designed to bolster Obote's pride. "The Kenya government repeated its protest over the violations against Kenya's territorial integrity and the fact that all individuals arrested had committed offenses under Kenya law," announced Kenyatta. "The Prime Minister of Uganda reiterated his personal regrets, as well as those of his government, and tendered an apology for this unfortunate incident." For several sol emn minutes he rubbed Obote's nose in the mess, then announced that both arms and men would be handed over-"in view of the sincere apology, assurances and explanations given by the Uganda...
...such important problems as these that the other four articles are addressed. In "The Death of Dualism," Alfred L. Goldberg '63 reminds us that "The admission that mind is a biological phenomenon arising from the operation of the brain and explainable in physical terms hurts our species and personal pride. Yet self-indulgent notions of mind have already suffered many setbacks." He sees no obstacles to a completely mechanistic understanding of thought and action and feels that a descriptive behavioral approach is only useful as long as the response of the organism at the neurological level is not understood...
...Tiger & the Ducks. The main theme of De Gaulle's speeches was equally familiar and equally effective: "Our destiny is called national prosperity." But through it, he wove the even headier subthemes of national pride and France's independence of the U.S. At the beach resort of Sables-d'Olonne, he cried, "This country, this France which has bound its wounds, is recovering its power, its influence; this France which is increasingly reckoned with from one end of the world to the other . . ." In Sainte-Hermine, he laid a wreath at the monument to Georges Clemenceau...
...Greek verb precisely. Bourke further notes that the New Testament translation is only about half completed, and that the texts will be reviewed for style by a literary editor before they are formally published in 1968. By then, the translators feel, Catholic critics may change their minds, and take pride in having for their own one of the century's most accurate and up-to-date versions of the New Testament...