Word: anthropologist
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...hour later, the question period officially over, the discussion moved out across the campus, soon moved out across the country. A Harvard professor called the lecture "the kind of statement Bryan used to make in the Bible belt." At Fordham, an anthropologist countered with the flat assertion that the "old story about man being nothing better than an educated ape is completely false...
...Canadian northwest. For 15 years he roamed the Arctic, forming small congregations, studying Eskimo life and manners, gradually falling in love with the place. Inuk (Eskimo for "I am the man") is the record of his Arctic life, a superb account that blends the impersonal acuteness of an anthropologist with the loving warmth of a truly religious...
...present this material is only vaguely alluded to in a number of courses, and it should be drawn together and presented complete in one course. For instance, a member of the Department of Philosophy, such as Professor Aiken, could consider the implications of modern liberal philosophy on religion. An anthropologist, such as Professor Kluckhohn, could develop the concepts of cultural relativity of morals and beliefs, and perhaps he might touch upon the effects of our missionaries on non-literate societies. The Department of Social Relations should certainly be represented, in considering, for instance, the irrational factors which influence the formation...
...sensitive directing keeps the story probable and well-paced; he is helped out a great deal by a delightfully pastoral musical score by Bonar Gillis. The acting, unfortunately, is less competent. Jane Cruikshank plays the Snopes daughter with a sheepish grin, while Basil Mange is never convincing as the anthropologist-congressman who finally settles the inter-racial strife. "North Forty's" technicolor sheep are wonderfuly convincing, however, and they leave the moviegoer with a true sensation of the Old West...
William E. Du Bois '90, anthropologist and a sponsor of the Stockholm Peace Appeal, will not address the Young Progressives tonight as scheduled, Lowell P. Beveridge, Jr. '52, president of the H.Y.P., said yesterday. Simultaneously, he announced that Paul Robeson will speak here Friday to commemorate "Negro History Week...