Word: transforming
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...researching to learn how to transform individuals and groups into more altruistic and creative beings who would feel, think, and behave as real members of a mankind un united into one intensely solid family," Sorokin stated...
...allowed to grow, this new phenomenon could transform the historic character of Germany and give it a new role in the family of nations. The conflicting forces within the German people might be resolved. West Germany's economy does not need an armaments industry to prosper, and its standard of living is already on the upgrade. Non-militarized, the Germans could be a living example of a people who coveted, sinned, were punished, repented, and found fulfillment in living without weapons. Militarized, they may not become warmongers, but they will be precluded from playing that distinctive old. The tragedy...
...stationed in the area. The paper will be put out once a week. Explained an editorial in the first issue: "[This newspaper] is being published by Germans, for Americans. It is not only for soldiers but also for the housewives, the children and the families . . . It should help to transform coexisting people into neighbors and to have the Americans walking among us instead of merely walking beside us . . . Our advertising section is another way of showing you that you can live very comfortably without the corner drugstore...
...conflicts long before she does. Nor need the play's want of real movement, its mere alternations between fact and fantasy, prove fatal. But lacking outward progression, Mrs. Patterson needs real leverage of words, real voltage of imagination; it needs moments that leave bright stains, that illuminate and transform. The contrasts it gets are emphatic without being poignant, the alchemy it practices is toward lead rather than gold. There is nothing discreditable about the play's failure; it shows no lack of courage, only of talent...
...editor of the tiny (circ. 2.800) Denver Catholic Register, which was then privately owned, although it has since been taken over by the Denver diocese. Its property consisted of two battered desks, a deficit of $4,000 and a tattered mailing list. Editor Smith went to work to transform the paper. "I was only 22 then,'' said he, "and I decided on two plans-work and prayer...