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Another factor in Pike's decision may well have been the suicide of his eldest son last February, giving him a burden of sorrow to bear on top of his heavy duties. Under the circumstances, it is almost certain that the House of Bishops will let Pike go. Some prelates, in fact, will be delighted to see him leave the active hierarchy, since he has persistently outraged colleagues with his unconventional theological views. Pike has expressly denied the Incarnation, the Trinity, the Virgin birth and the physical resurrection of Christ...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Episcopalians: The Worker-Bishop | 5/20/1966 | See Source »

...makes it a vision of man turned into useless performer, while Albright excoriates the self in his wrinkly "And God Created Man in His Own Image." Unrelated by style or influence, each artist nonetheless portrays man in the early Depression years as a desperate creature searching for identity, not sorrow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Exhibitions: Progressive Seebang | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

...link with language all started, he figures, in Rumania, where he was born 51 years ago, the son of a box manufacturer. "My father printed messages of condolence for the departed on the ribbons that go with mortuary wreaths," he recalls. " 'Eternal Regrets' or 'Crushed by Sorrow.' These messages were printed in big wooden type, and I often composed my name with the same type. To this day, I am obsessed with the question mark and numbers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Graphics: The Message in the Medium | 4/15/1966 | See Source »

...came directly from Washington solely to meet with you and to discuss the most pressing problem facing our nation," he declared. "What we do about it may mean tranquility or sorrow for young Americans five, ten, and twenty years from...

Author: By Ellen Ake, | Title: Young, Bond Deplore 'Dirty War;' But Ex-Green Beret Wins the Field | 3/5/1966 | See Source »

Philadelphia, Here I Come! by Brian Friel. All honor to Shakespeare, but parting is not sweet sorrow. When a man leaves home, love and country, he buries part of himself, and he is not likely to stand beside that grave dry-eyed. Philadelphia, Here I Come! is a young man's leave-taking crammed into one night, as Gareth O'Donnell says goodbye to the Irish village of Ballybeg and prepares to embark by jet for America, "a vast, restless place that doesn't give a curse about the past." The play is honest, lyrical, unaffected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Goodbye to Ballybeg | 2/25/1966 | See Source »

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