Word: discussion
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...dorms also encourage women to put aside sexual stereotypes. Students often used to discuss various activities as "masculine" or "feminine." Said one: "I think I'll go into the foreign service. It's less masculine than politics. Competition, backbiting in politics tend to make you less feminine." In the coed dorm, such attitudes are challenged as "sexist" and "untrue." Some of these changes stem from women's lib, Reid notes, yet she is convinced from the tenor of her interviews that the coed dorm life-style was even more influential...
...politics or quit the White House, he could, after formal proceedings, be expelled from the Jesuits. At week's end, the President's priest had not answered either yes or no about the trip to Boston. Nor did White House Communications Director Ken W. Clawson want to discuss the matter. Said he: "Nothing in the world would make me get in the middle of an argument between two Jesuits...
Although Harvard has not allowed Pei to discuss the new plans for the library, sources said last week that the new proposal will include two completely separate scaled-down buildings, to be constructed in brick to conform with the pattern established by surrounding Harvard Houses...
...little since I went there, but here things are really different. For instance, in my Torts class, I put up a list of people who've had trouble with their exams, and I'll go over it with them if they want. And for anyone else who wants to discuss their paper, they're free to walk in. With a class of only 125, you can do things like that. Because of money problems there's pressure to expand the school, but I feel obliged to resist it. If someone said we have to have more students...
...Question. Coggan supported Ramsey's Methodist merger plan, and he now sees that effort as part of a "larger unity program" encompassing all Christians. Indeed, his own Call to the North program involves 52 denominational leaders, including Catholics and Salvation Army workers, who meet regularly at York to discuss how best to spread the word of God. Coggan appears receptive to the ordination of women, a practice that has never occurred in Anglicanism except for a handful of cases in Hong Kong. "It is now an open question," Coggan says. "The emotions are less and the intelligent approach...