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Word: suffering (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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French Playwright Anouilh has too often been dismissed as a kind of verbal dandy. Yet his underlying vision of life is dark and inconsolable. Anouilh's characters suffer with a quip on their lips while stretched on a rack that is the distance between the way things are and the way they want them to be. Anouilh is not interested in either ex posing or extolling his characters. He simply wants to catch them, and the audience, in the cruel toils of the human situation, masked, as it always is, with deceptive everyday smiles. Of The Rehearsal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Purity Corrupted | 10/4/1963 | See Source »

Radcliffe dorm meals suffer from problems even worse than those caused by the food. South House's experiment with a single House dining room can alleviate some of these. The attempt should be welcomed; unfortunately, many students have already opposed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Meal Appeal | 9/30/1963 | See Source »

Dickie will hardly suffer academically. The free school, which is still passing the hat to pay for its year-long $1,000,000 crash program, is nongraded and amply supplied with teachers. It has a well-qualified school superintendent, Neil V. Sullivan, who is on leave from heading the schools of East Williston, Long Island. Because Dickie is far ahead of many of the Negro 17-year-olds, his father expects him to get "darn near tutorial education...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Integration: Dickie's Decision | 9/27/1963 | See Source »

...courses suffer the same fate of constriction. Gov. 213a looks at "Social Theory from Marx through Freud" with the vision of Barrington Moore. An all-star cast of Raiffa, Schlaifer, and Pratt will discuss decision theory in Stat. 288. And in response to the first commandment, "Let there be light," we have Via. Stud. 145, "The Flics," courtesy of R. G. Gardner. Harvard students are lucky to have such a pious faculty...

Author: By Wilson LYMAN Krats, | Title: Shopping Around: Tu. Th. (S.) | 9/24/1963 | See Source »

...only way to inner strength. He will probably never make a great literary contribution of his own; bit through his relentless campaign for increased intellectual freedom Yevtushenko has made, and will continue to make, an important contribution to he artistic achievements of others. He and his allies will suffer setbacks, as they did last spring, but each time they will widen the sphere of freedom little further...

Author: By Steven V. Roberts, | Title: Yevtushenko: The Poet As Revolutionary | 9/24/1963 | See Source »

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