Word: conscious
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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During interview segments, other Beatnik writers do not deny Kerouac's status as "King of the Beat Generation." Kerouac seems to be the hardest to pin down. He doesn't have the grisly panache of Burroughs or the self-conscious religiousity of Ginsberg. There is a certain instability, an un-disciplined heart to Kerouac's work and life...
...feel absolutely no different. I'm not conscious that I'm teaching in Gen Ed," Goldhagen said...
Many of these patients overlooked or minimized the abuses of therapists and doggedly remained in treatment. The reason, says Langs, is that the evidence of what the therapist is doing is too threatening for the conscious mind to accept. Patients file the information away unconsciously and begin to deal with it in dreams and feedback to their therapists. In a sense, says Langs, the patient and therapist switch roles, with the patient taking on the responsibility of dealing with the therapist's problems. One patient, for example, dreamed that he took his therapist to a restaurant and was not sure...
...Nicaraguan attorney and Managua's Ambassador to the Netherlands, attempted to prove that the contras were a creation of the U.S. and would wither away without Washington's funding. In an affidavit, former Contra Leader Edgar Chamorro claimed that the rebels were practicing terrorism against civilian populations as a conscious policy. He alleged that the political and military activities of the rebel Nicaraguan Democratic Force, which he left last year, "were directed and controlled by the CIA." Chamorro said that agents hired by the CIA would carry out acts of sabotage, including the mining of Nicaraguan harbors and the bombing...
...been 13 years since Neil Young last made the same kind of record twice. His creative streak continues with "Old Ways," a twangy Nashville album that follows on the heels of 1983's "Everybody's Rockin," an upbeat if self-conscious pseudo-fifties revival; 1982's "Trans," the sonic and artistic equivalent of being flushed down a mainframe computer; and "Re-Ac-Tor" (1981), a gritty, post-punk effort. No, Young is certainly not doing what he did last year, or the year before, or even the year before that...