Word: relationship
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...economic development, history, politics, anthropology, and geological and biological scientists. Mr. Skelton put the case strongly in the Adams House Oak Leaf: "Geography conditions the lives of men. It is a point of view from which the data of many sciences can and must be surveyed in spatial relationship or distribution. Maps are accordingly essential tools of the social scientist...
Research began when the scientists administered their medicine (formula: 1¾ oz. dry gin + ¼ oz. vermouth + 1 olive). Tests ended "at saturation," when nobody cares. The conclusion: "A linear relationship of 2 db increase of tolerance per martini until the third cocktail became apparent. At this point, another physiological condition gradually occurs within the subject, causing the tolerance to increase on a cumulative basis of 4 db per cocktail until saturation...
...attempt to play a separate power role apart from Europe, a role based on a 'special relationship' with the U.S. and on being the head of a 'commonwealth' which has no political structure, unity, or strength-this role is about played out. Great Britain, attempting to work alone and to be a broker between the United States and Russia, has seemed to conduct policy as weak as its military power...
...Catholic bookstores, his writings are bestsellers. "We can't keep this man's stuff in stock," a bookseller said happily. During the council's debates, many "progressive" bishops from northern Europe cribbed abundantly from his writings. Rahner personally wrote a draft resolution on the relationship of Scripture and tradition that last month was put before the council as an alternative to one proposed by Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, the powerful and conservative chief of the Vatican's Congregation of the Holy Office...
Rahner's boldness has led him to reconsider church teaching on everything from ethics to eschatology, from the meaning of the parish to the nature of political power. "Rahner," says Cardinal Konig, "sees new aspects behind every traditional teaching." In his study of the relationship of the hierarchy to the Pope, for example, Rahner argues that the highest authority in Catholicism is not the Pope but the Pope in union with his bishops. When the Pope decides a matter for the entire church, says Rahner, he does so not by virtue of his own office alone, but as head...