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Archive Search Results
Your search for
Moses Hadas
returned 14 results
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| Article Name |
Issue Date |
Author |
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Professor Ginzberg's affectionate account of his distinguished father is not formal biography but, as he himself properly calls it, a personal memoir.
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September 1966 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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THE GRANDIOSE MOSAICS which all the world knows-at Santa Maria Maggiore at Rome of the 5th century, at San Vitale at Ravenna of the 6th, at Torcello and Palermo of the 12th and 13th-were...
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November 1960 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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UNTIL a century ago the interval between the classical ages of Greece and Rome, which then received the designation Hellenistic, was a barren stretch despised and neglected by classical, and...
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September 1959 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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FOR promoting understanding between Jews and Chrisitians Professor Grant's little book is more efffective than a thousand interfaith dinners. Ira learning and clarity and convic tion it car...
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July 1959 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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SCHOLARS, like women, are deviations from the norm Man; and just as the position of women can serve as a criterion for a culture, so can the position of scholars also. Sometimes women...
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March 1959 |
Moses Hadas |
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IN ANY conflict it is the victorious party that writes the history, and, particularly if the issue is religion, the record of the opposition is either wholly effaced or survives only in the...
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January 1959 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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A PRIME ingredient disappeared from Jewish life when, following the example of philological study generally, concern for the Jewish literary tradition became professional. Books were transformed...
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July 1958 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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October 1957 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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July 1957 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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February 1957 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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November 1956 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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Ever since the emancipation of the Jews from their medieval disabilities and restraints, individual Jews, and Judaism as a whole, have had to wrestle with the problem of a right relation to the world around them.
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August 1956 |
Moses Hadas |
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The influence of the Aeneid in shaping European ideas on religion and politics has been incalculably great, and it is the peculiarly Vergilian content of the poem, not the things borrowed from Greek models, that exercised this influence.
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November 1953 |
Moses Hadas |
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A REcoRD of the proceedings of a body of zothcentury rabbis, no matter how determined they might be to maintain distinctiveness in outlook and language within the general American culture,...
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May 1951 |
Reviewed by Moses Hadas |
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