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Unhappily, the film betrays its literary origin by stressing emotion rather than motion. It is the tale of the Rev. Stephen Kumalo (Canada Lee), a simple Zulu minister who journeys from Ndotsheni, Natal to the great, bewildering city of Johannesburg to find his lost sister. There he discovers that she has become a prostitute in the squalid; segregated shantytown where the plight of black-skinned people in a white man's world is shockingly evident. The black voyager also finds that his only child, Absalom, has murdered a young white champion of the oppressed Negroes. The victim...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Feb. 18, 1952 | 2/18/1952 | See Source »

Over & above specific differences hangs a divergence in national viewpoint: the fact that the U.S., by instinct and origin, emotionally responds to colonial peoples' cry for freedom-while its best friend is frankly in the colonial business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Diplomat | 2/11/1952 | See Source »

Students packed the large lounge of Harkness Commons yesterday to hear Her Royal Highness Princess Alice of Greece discuss "The Origin of Monastic Orders in Eastern and Western Churches" at the Law School Coffee Hour...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Greek Princess Talks | 2/6/1952 | See Source »

...change from life in the womb to the world outside is, to Gesell, only an uncommonly striking and abrupt phase of this continuous development. And he includes mental growth along with physical growth. "It is probable," he writes, "that all mental life has a motor basis and a motor origin. The non-mystical mind [i.e., the mind when not engaged in pure reverie] must always take hold. Even in the rarefied realms of conceptual reasoning we speak of intellectual grasp . . . Thinking might be defined as a comprehension and manipulation of meanings. Accordingly, thought has its beginnings in infancy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Father to the Man | 1/7/1952 | See Source »

...Americans? Most are career diplomats, painstaking, patient men who have come up the long ladder through minor embassy jobs to their final rewards. The typical career diplomat was born on the Eastern seaboard and graduated from an Ivy League college (though the younger, rising generation is more scattered in origin and education). His training makes him an observer rather than a doer, a compromiser rather than a shaker, a man of caution rather than a man of decision. Only a rare few have private means of their own, and except in the very biggest missions, riches are no longer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: U.S. Ambassadors | 12/31/1951 | See Source »

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