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Robert Seidenberg of Syracuse is one analyst who has bought the feminist argument. Says he: "We are confronted with the paradox that women are declared phobic when they exhibit anxiety in public places where custom, until yesterday, had prohibited them from entering. If one replaces the idea that the woman had the desire to sleep with father with the thought that she wanted to work with him in his downtown office, more salutary results might be obtained...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: The Panic of Open Spaces | 11/7/1977 | See Source »

World population growth-and how to slow it-continues to be a subject of great controversy. The planet's poorest nations have yet to find effective ways to check their population increase-at least without restricting citizens' rights and violating such traditions as the custom of having large families as insurance in old age. India's new government, for example, has abandoned coercive birth control procedures, even though the country, with a population of 635 million, is growing by a million new people per month. The U.S. National Security Council has said that runaway population growth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: How to Defuse the Population Bomb | 10/24/1977 | See Source »

More traditional road trips will take Harvard men to New England women's colleges. Both freshmen and upperclassmen take part in this seasonless custom...

Author: By Susan H. Goldstein, | Title: Long Weekend Arrives | 10/8/1977 | See Source »

Shahak views the upswing in "religious fanaticism," among both Muslims in the Arab nations and the Jews in Israel, with dismay. He is skeptical of just what "secularism" is taken to mean. He recalls a PLO custom in pre-civil-war Labanon. When a Palestinian fighter died in combat, his funeral procession would be led by a Muslim mufti [religious leader] and a Christian priest walking hand in hand. "This doesn't mean secularity," Shahak concludes with a laugh. "'Secular' means, for people like me, putting the clergy in their place...

Author: By Marilyn L. Booth, | Title: Dissidence in the Promised Land | 9/29/1977 | See Source »

...metaphor depicting life as nothing but a flesh-pot carnival of the bizarre, where nearly everyone is a con man looking out for number one, and even a bit of free sympathy is hard to come by. The technique reminds one of "Cabaret", but the fast razzle-dazzle is custom-made Chicago...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Flim-Flam in 'Chicago' | 9/26/1977 | See Source »

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