000 01735nas a22001697a 4500
003 Ost
005 20230616153757.0
008 230522b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aRCM Library
_cRCM
100 _aArgow, W. Waldemar W
245 _aLife's problems /
_cW. Waldemar W. Argow.
300 _apage 33-35
500 _aThe Rotary Balita no. 720 (May 7, 1953)
520 _aIn these days of confusion and uncertainty, there are many who think that if our economic problem could be solved, then indeed would life be free from anxiety and apprehension. Alas, those who so think forget that there are countless problems that would continue unsolved. Human nature would remain with its medley of conflicting motives. There would remain the inner hurt produced by the open grave with its baffling mystery of life and death; there would remain the necessity for adjustment and understanding between husband and wife, between parents and children, between employer and employee, between friend and neighbor. And above all also would remain the eternal choice between values. The whole problem of what makes for healthy and creative living is eternally with us. In a perfectly functioning economic order people could wound each other; they could be unkind, unjust, dishonest, and vulgar in taste, just as they are now. In our haste to build Utopia, therefore, we need to remind ourselves that the discipline of the individual is even more essential than the regimentation of economic forces. Man's supreme concern has ever been with the abiding springs of action in the human heart. - W. Waldemar W. Argow.
773 0 _02226
_92223
_aRotary Club of Manila.
_oRCM-000015
_tThe Rotary Balita No. 700 to 723 /
942 _2lcc
_cART
_n0
999 _c4324
_d4324