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Many of the nation's 580 Catholic periodicals warmed to the campaign, citing an estimate that "doubly taxed" Catholics, by running parochial schools, now save non-Catholic taxpayers nearly $3 billion a year. Protestants backed the Catholic President. Seventh-day Adventists were well pleased that the Kennedy bill excludes church schools, even though they have the highest ratio of students to church members (one for every seven members v. the Catholics' eight). "Kennedy is keeping his campaign pledge magnificently," said one Adventist official...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Catholic Heat | 3/10/1961 | See Source »

...income. The ancient Israelites paid it, and Christians carried on the custom; the Synod of Macon in 585 made it compulsory under threat of excommunication. After the Reformation, the Protestants continued tithing until the custom fell into disuse during the last century, except with the Mormons, the Seventh-day Adventists, and several other groups, which have flourished on it. Since World War II, however, tithing has staged something of a comeback among Protestants, though not among Catholics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: A Tenth Before Taxes | 1/6/1961 | See Source »

Supervisor Howell, 65, a onetime Seventh-day Adventist missionary in South America, assured everyone that his own view was not necessarily the state's. No state teacher was under fire for teaching evolution, though "his own mind should tell him that he is doing wrong in so teaching." But the damage had been done. From the size of the uproar, it appeared that the majority of the people of Washington subscribed to Darwin's theory. Most embarrassed of all: Lloyd J. Andrews, state superintendent of public instruction, who had appointed Howell and who is seeking the Republican nomination...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Descent of Man | 3/14/1960 | See Source »

...tiny Arauca Indian village of Chimpay perches high and inaccessible in the Patagonian Andes, on the border between Argentina and Chile, and the Seventh-day Adventist missionary who made his way up to it one day in 1935 must have rejoiced to be bringing religion to so remote a cranny of the world. He could only have been amazed at what he found: a community of Indians who had no Bible and could not read it if they had, although they observed the Sabbath and' knew much of Moses' teaching. He settled among them for several months, pieced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Jews of the Andes | 1/18/1960 | See Source »

...Prophecy. When the unknown Seventh-day Adventist climbed down the mountain, he left some Bibles in Chimpay, and the Indians began to study the Torah and live by it. Eleven years later, a Chilean Jew named Santiago Martinez visited Chimpay, gave the Indians real instruction in Judaism, and told them that the children of Israel had completed their millennium of suffering for having forsaken Jehovah and were soon to return to Zion to await the coming of the Messiah. The Araucanians observed Jewish dietary laws, feast and fast days, separated men and women for worship, even broke down their tribe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Jews of the Andes | 1/18/1960 | See Source »

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