Word: equalize
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...girls be getting Greetings? Not for the present, Hershey quickly assured a reporter for the University of Michigan's daily newspaper. At a national conference on the draft in Chicago, Anthropologist Margaret Mead, 65, supported Hershey's idea of coed conscription to make national service truly equal and universal. She drew the line, though, at letting the ladies be battleaxes. "I do not believe in using women in combat," she said, "because females are too fierce...
...story of the tournament, photographed in color by 117 cameras, is now told in a two-hour movie that might with equal aptness be considered a sports film or a war documentary. As a sports film, it will principally appeal to the soccer sect-a rapidly enlarging minority in the U.S., where two twelve-team "major leagues" are currently being organized. As a war documentary, it will command the empathy of any spectator still animal enough to admire the aspect of men in sudden, intricate, continuous, beautiful and aggressive movement. Indeed, it might safely be said that Goal! will provide...
...there is a conceptual failing in director Leland Moss's rendering of Goat Island, it is that he makes Angelo, and not Agata, the play's center. This leaves the three women on too much of an equal and collectively subordinate level. Moss has had to miscast himself as Angelo, which in large measure explains this shift in emphasis, since he plays the part with too little earthly charisma, and too much surface charm, to be merely an agent of anything. Angelo emerges as a likeable rather than loveable character, and his appeal reaches as much to the audience...
...service for their husbands. Not today. And a generation ago, women seemed much more dependent upon being loved as a prerequisite for sex, whereas today they seem just as able as men to enjoy it without romantic love. "Apparently, as they have gained greater freedom, they feel entitled to equal sexual satisfaction along with their other equal rights...
...strings of their instruments). Says Boston's Leinsdorf: "Uniformly, the women's pride is so great that their attendance record is better than the men's. They have my utmost respect." But women rarely get the utmost money, and most orchestra managers freely admit that given equal talent, they will hire the breadwinning man over the woman every time...