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Word: belled (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Joseph Dorman is the director of Arguing the World, a documentary tracing the lives of four of the New York Intellectuals: Irving Howe, Daniel Bell, Nathan Glazer and Irving Kristol. The film begins with Marxism in the '30s and closes with Neo-Conservatism in the present day. The Crimson spoke to Dorman after the premiere screening of his film at Brookline's Coolidge Corner Theatre...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: `Arguing the World' Shows Intellectual Side of Activism | 3/13/1998 | See Source »

...stayed very close to her issue, using legal cases to illustrate her point. This is a winning strategy for a subject that tends to get silly very quickly. For instance, it is difficult to believe the claim of the League of United Latin American Citizens that Dinky, Taco Bell's Chihuahua, "is definitely a hate crime that leads to the type of immigrant bashing that His-panics are now up against. "The silliness here is not so much in the sentiment of the complaint, as in the overheated rhetoric. By speaking about the issues in a more hard-headed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Stayin' Alive | 3/12/1998 | See Source »

Arguing the World,a documentary film about Daniel Bell, Nathan Glazer, Irving Howe and Irving Kristol, four Jewish men from New York who began their lives as radical activist intellectuals, traces their development from their Trotskyist days at New York's City College to the present. In the movie, Kristol says of his youth, "Like most people with some political consciousness in the '30s, I thought the world was coming to an end." So they fought; they yelled on street corners, they rallied, they discussed the fate of their turbulent world in which Stalin was the successor of the Bolshevik...

Author: By Daniel M. Suleiman, | Title: Is There Something to Fight About? | 3/9/1998 | See Source »

...plaque outside this establishment tells the story of Old Jimmy Watson, the last of Boston's town criers, who finally gave up the town-crying business in 1795 to set up a tavern. Unfortunately, the fact that The Bell In Hand is one of Boston's oldest taverns is one of its few distinctions. This bar is exceedingly popular with a uniform group of young professionals and what one patron termed "students after their M-R-S degree...

Author: By Inie Park, | Title: A Better Glass of Beer | 3/5/1998 | See Source »

Still, the beer is reasonably priced and the bar itself has a pleasant, wood-panelled aesthetic. Those looking for shoulder-to-shoulder company and a lack of character distractions should find The Bell In Hand a pleasing match...

Author: By Inie Park, | Title: A Better Glass of Beer | 3/5/1998 | See Source »

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