Word: enjoy
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...hour "lessons," pays a modest fee ($75 generally, but only $45 for college students) and he is ready to reap the full benefits of transcendental meditation. Simply expressed, the goal of TM, which despite its Oriental trappings is not a religion but a quite secular relaxation technique, is to enjoy life more, to shuck tension by letting the mind travel far from mundane concerns a couple of times a day. To TM preachers, the practitioner is "expanding his awareness," developing his "creative intelligence," experiencing "subtler states of thought," and achieving "deep rest as a basis for dynamic action...
...stripes, the show entitled Recent Figure Sculpture at least provides an incentive to return to the museum. Realism in art has re-emerged, and in this case it is a realism both humorous and shocking. Even the person who feels he has to be entertained by art exhibitions should enjoy it. Debates will undoubtedly continue as to whether these sculptures are art, but the viewer can decide for himself...
...bounds or too close to the boundaries to permit reasonable play. Moving the hash marks closer to the center of the field has given offensive players-particularly wide receivers and running backs-more room to maneuver, while the defenses have more ground to cover. Also, field-goal kickers now enjoy a better angle...
American scientists have good reason to be envious. Even though the Soviet Union is in theory a classless society, Soviet scientists are a powerful and privileged elite. Better paid than most of their countrymen, they enjoy superior housing, ownership of private cars, long-term job security, and perhaps most important of all, the freedom to read many Western journals and literature. Science, too, occupies a special place in the minds of government officials, who are frankly puzzled by those Westerners who are now vilifying modern science and its goals. "How could there be any antiscientific feeling in the Soviet Union...
Women's Liberation, Miss Decter concludes, is a rather messy living testimony to "the difficulties women are experiencing with the rights and freedoms they already enjoy." Though she may speak in "the language of social justice," the Women's Liberationist is really afraid of the risks of being human: "the rhythms of time and mortality." She lacks "the courage to rec ognize the extent of one's frailty and dependence on others." What she re fuses to come to terms with is not a man's world but life itself...