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Showing papers on "Surprise published in 1969"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: No wonder you activities are, reading will be always needed, it is not only to fulfil the duties that you need to finish in deadline time but also to encourage your mind and thoughts.
Abstract: “But surely, in the third act when the father sends the son from his home, your intent is to probe the unresolved oedipal strivings of both men?” The man from the Sunday Review of the Creative Arts looked up from his note-pad, a faint air of well-bred surprise on his manicured face.

6 citations


Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1969
TL;DR: The great surprise of modem South America has been the drastic reinvigoration of historic Venezuela as discussed by the authors, which carries more hope than the experiences of Costa Rica and Mexico, for South Americans generally.
Abstract: The great surprise of modem South America has been the drastic reinvigoration of historic Venezuela. For South Americans generally, it carries more hope than the experiences of Costa Rica and Mexico.

2 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Hallinger as mentioned in this paper showed the basic differences in organization and observance between the two tenthand eleventh-century movements of monastic reform, the Lotharingian and Burgundian, thus proving them to have been each quite independent of the other.
Abstract: When in 1950–1951 Kassius Hallinger's impressive, not to say monument al, work was published in which with extraordinary wealth of detail he showed the basic differences in organization and observance between the two tenthand eleventh-century movements of monastic reform, the Lotharingian and Burgundian, thus proving them to have been each quite independent of the other — a thesis contrary to the view then prevalent among historians — one of the most striking features of his elaborate study was the concluding chapter devoted to the differences between the customaries or consuetudinaries of these two distinct currents of monastic life, emanating respectively from Gorze and Cluny. It was no surprise, therefore, some years later to learn that he had succeeded in securing the collaboration of twenty-seven medievalists in a project which was to include critical editions of the chief representatives of this type of document.