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...Lecture Series, Man and the Visual Environment: Dr. Donald A. Kennedy, Cultural Anthropologist, Tufts University, on "Man-made Environments Express Cultural Values...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Summer School Calendar | 7/3/1967 | See Source »

There is a similarly ambiguous quality to the education which the Volunteer picks up abroad. After two years he understands infinitely more than someone who spends six weeks in Bombay with Experiment in International Living, but he achieves something less than--or better, very different from--the visiting anthropologist or political scientist. Indeed, Volunteers often find it fashionable to describe their environment in the kind of sweeping, value-laden generalizations which they learned to beware of in college history of sociology class. "Peruvian Indians are simple and friendly people," they will joke, or "The Ghanaians are so much smarter than...

Author: By Efrem Sigel, | Title: Peace Corps: Millennium Is Yet to Come | 3/11/1967 | See Source »

...will write about their work in developing societies. Alongside startling naivetes we are likely to find startling insights. The Volunteer does not have an economist's understanding of macro-economic growth, but he knows many things about development that the expert has never seen. And while he lacks the anthropologist's scholarship in his approach to foreign culture, the Volunteer brings to it a unique kind of involvement...

Author: By Efrem Sigel, | Title: Peace Corps: Millennium Is Yet to Come | 3/11/1967 | See Source »

...Louis W. Schultz, whose 11-in.-long delta wing, made of graph paper, flew 58 ft. 2 in. before skidding to a stop. Pioneer Naval Aviator Ralph S. Barnaby, 74, took the aerobatics prize with a stabilizer-equipped glider that gracefully floated through two complete outside loops. Brown University Anthropologist James Sakoda folded his way to the origami award; his swept-wing craft proved air-worthless, but the judges admired it all the same for its "elegance and rigidity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: Big Boys at Play | 3/3/1967 | See Source »

...understand McLuhan, this book is a provocative primer. In both text and pictures, it uses the zany Zen technique of shattering orderly thought with irrational accident. Even the title is a gag, deriving from McLuhan's earlier pronouncement: "The medium is the message." That meant, as any anthropologist might have put it, that technology predetermines social structure; hence, tools prefigure the psychology of their users. By punningly altering the slogan, McLuhan merely means that "all media work us over completely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Ultimate Non-Book | 3/3/1967 | See Source »

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