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...included the "game," a rugged encounter session in which participants acted out their inmost hostilities. Learning the truth about themselves supposedly helped them stay off drugs or booze. But in recent years, Dederich has had more grandiose ambitions and transformed Synanon into a religious cult with himself as high priest and prophet. It now attracts fewer addicts and more middle-class eccentrics in search of new adventures in living...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Life at Synanon Is Swinging | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

...statue was dragged off a sandy seabed in the nets of surprised fishermen from the Italian port of Fano in 1963. A wily antique dealer and his two cousins from the nearby town of Gubbio bought it for $5,500, then kept it in a local priest's house, as they tried to peddle it secretly to European art dealers for $200,000. A Roman antique dealer tipped Italian officials off to the statue's existence. But when police raided the priest's house in 1964, the bronze was gone. In a lengthy court fight, the priest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Art Is Long, Tax Suits Short | 12/12/1977 | See Source »

...with a growing feeling of dismay, alongside a real sense of amusement to see in your story "Was Vatican I Rigged?" [Nov. 14] what a Catholic priest will do to explain away his loss of faith. Perhaps Father August Hasler believes that the Second Vatican Council was the only true council in church history. And so now begins the task of pulling apart Vatican I. Then perhaps he'll start on the Council of Trent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Dec. 5, 1977 | 12/5/1977 | See Source »

...Greeves letters are being edited by Walter Hooper, a U.S. Episcopal priest who lives in Oxford as literary executor of the Lewis estate. Hooper has an explanation for Lewis' growing popularity. He thinks the West is moving away from materialism and liberalism and needs "a coherent, universal faith, something permanent in a world of seeming chaos." No one better fits that need than C.S. Lewis, who once said, "All that is not eternal is eternally out of date...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: C.S. Lewis Goes Marching On | 12/5/1977 | See Source »

...Courbet bear the cost of restoring the column. Bankrupt, he fled to Switzerland and died in exile in 1877. There is always room for argument over the extent of Courbet's realism. The man who insisted on setting down the bald truth of visual experience, from a drunken priest's red nose to the drool on a stag's jaws, was allegorist and history painter as well as factual witness; and there he could be very puzzling indeed. The debate on Courbet has been stepped up by a magnificent retrospective that opened this fall at the Grand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Courbet: Painting as Politics | 12/5/1977 | See Source »

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