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Died. Eugene Speicher, 79, peerless U.S. portraitist, a robust, orderly New Yorker who imposed his own stamp of warm-hued repose-at its best in his pinky luminous nudes-on all his subjects from Katharine Cornell as Candida to country bumpkins; after a long illness; in Woodstock, N.Y., where in 1907 he founded an art colony with his close friend, Artist George Bellows...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: May 18, 1962 | 5/18/1962 | See Source »

...wing Nation triumphantly flushed another controversy from Nixon's book. "Richard M. Nixon," it said, "has just kicked a large hole in his -and the Government's - case against Alger Hiss." The hole: Nixon's statement that FBI agents in December 1948 had found the old Woodstock typewriter that was instrumental in establishing Hiss's guilt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Barbed Pity | 4/13/1962 | See Source »

Died. Anton Otto Fischer, 80, preeminent U.S. illustrator of sea stories (including the Saturday Evening Post's Tugboat Annie and Colin Glencannon series), a droll, Bavarian-born artist who acquired his blue water palette during eight youthful years on windjammers; of a heart attack; in Woodstock...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Apr. 6, 1962 | 4/6/1962 | See Source »

...prestige of Catholicism lower than in the country where, in such respects as wealth, numbers, and strength of organization, it is so powerful," wrote Historian D. W. Brogan. "The general Catholic community in America does not know what scholarship is," said Jesuit Theologian Gustave Weigel of Maryland's Woodstock College. And the Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, Hesburgh's predecessor at Notre Dame, asked sorrowfully, "Where are the Catholic Salks, Oppenheimers, Einsteins...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: God & Man at Notre Dame | 2/9/1962 | See Source »

Bone in the Throat. In these ecumenical times, argued Father Walter J. Burghardt, S.J., professor of patristic theology at the Jesuit Seminary in Woodstock, Md., theologians are obliged to look harder at the issues that divide Christians. "For the bone that sticks in the Protestant throat," he said, "is Scripture v. dogma, the original message of salvation from the mouth of God and the promulgation of infallible propositions. It is this passage, this seemingly lyric leap from Scripture to dogma, and from dogma to dogma, that scandalizes the Protestant theologian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Problem of Mary | 1/12/1962 | See Source »

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