Word: smile
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Reischaur does disentangle himself from current Japanese politics often enough to write many articles for various Japanese magazines. Usually these pieces take the form of semi scholarly comments on Japanese history. "It's my field, after all," he adds with a smile. These articles, however, are only popularizations of ideas conceived when he still occupied a stall in Widener. Original research and serious writing will have to wait until he leaves government service...
...more than those of nations seemed to be the chief concern of the managers. Lebanon's Philosopher Charles Habib Malik, former President of the United Nations General Assembly, chided Western businessmen for offering the developing peoples only material ends. Said Malik: "Roads, dams, efficiency and the smile of rulers-that is all that matters; but spirit, freedom, joy, happiness, truth, man-that never enters the mind. A world of perfect technicians is the aim, not a world of human beings, let alone of beings divine." Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Archbishop of Genoa and an ecclesiastical manager who has often written...
...readiness to join in a dialogue with other churches involving mutual correction. "If this had been known to the churches," he said, "there are many who would not belong." Vis ser 't Hooft, who is Verghese's superior in the council's hierarchy, answered with a smile: "I will have to find time in Geneva to speak with my colleague...
...chores, and when Daddy (TV's Chuck Connors) comes home on his fishing boat, he makes Sandy turn Flipper loose. Soon after that, when Sandy and Daddy are trying to catch fish and bringing up nothing but empty nets, Flipper torpedoes up to the boat with a big smile on his face. Flipper leads them to a whole school of pompano, and Daddy is very happy. Next day Flipper jumps into the fish pen and gobbles up all the pompano, and Daddy is very unhappy. He dislikes dolphins anyway, because they eat a lot of fish and snarl...
...York! At first I was confused by your beauty, by those great golden long-legged girls. So shy at first before your metallic eyes, your frosted smile So shy. And the anguish in the depths of skyscraper streets Lifting eyes hawkhooded to the sun's eclipse. Sulphurous your light and livid the towers with heads that thunderbolt the sky The skyscrapers which defy the storms with muscles of steel and stone-glazed hide. But two weeks on the bare sidewalks of Manhattan At the end of the third week the fever seizes you with the pounce of a leopard...