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Word: soul (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...barrel of energy at 54, Chaliapin has lived in New York since 1935. In the past 17 years he has painted some 300 TIME covers (including this week's), most of them from photographs. Yet in each he has managed to reveal much of the soul that resides within the physical envelope. Chaliapin sees into people, and he paints just what he sees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Opening the Envelope | 3/23/1959 | See Source »

...TIME's Art Editor Alexander Eliot (Three Hundred Years of American Painting). Highly personal, aphoristic, poetic, Sight and Insight shuns critical pedantries in art to speak of bigger things-life and death, God and man, the wisdom of children, the power of dreams, love, fate, and the human soul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: School for Heroes | 3/23/1959 | See Source »

Jack Levine's King Asa is a hymn to tradition and one executed with devilish skill. But can this form, as Fogg hopes, an alternative to anarchy and a cue for the future? Such prospects can only be viewed with extreme pessismism. This is the exterior, not the soul, of the old master...

Author: By Paul W. Schwartz, | Title: Bloom and Levine | 3/17/1959 | See Source »

This precarious perch for man's soul is a long way from traditional Christian belief. Paul Tillich. Reinhold Niebuhr said once, "is trying to walk a fence between man's doubts and the traditions of man's faith. He walks the fence with great virtuosity, and if he slips a bit to one side or the other, it is hardly noticed by us humble pedestrians." There are many humble and not-so-humble pedestrians who think that no man who calls himself a Christian has any business on the fence in the first place. A fence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: To Be or Not to Be | 3/16/1959 | See Source »

...attempting to raise enough money for Houghton Library to obtain the 25-year correspondence between the "incomparable Max" and Frederick Turner (it was Turner who said, when the dying Oscar Wilde told him of dreaming of supping with the dead, "I'm sure, Oscar, you were the life and soul of the party."). The New Yorker series on Beerbohm is likely to grow into a book, as did The Worcester Account (on which The Cold Wind and the Warm is based) and Duveen...

Author: By Peter J. Rothenberg, | Title: Anecdotal Playwright | 3/6/1959 | See Source »

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