Word: feels
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...start taking seriously those things which you used to take for granted. It's like losing part of your childhood by negating it. You can feel proud of yourself that you're mature enough or sensitive enough so you don't find it amusing to see someone humiliate himself for a laugh. Maybe you can feel proud that you get indignant when others clap gleefully for two midget wrestlers who are making fools of themselves for money. But somehow it's kind of a drag not to be able to laugh...
...avant-garde campuses, where antimilitarism is now the prevailing style, ROTC students feel more socially out than ever. To compound their defensiveness, ROTC critics argue that the goals of the university and the military are antithetical. "The university seeks to promote democracy and equality and above all to prize independence of mind and judgment," says James R. Anderson, 29, a humanities instructor at Michigan State University, who spent two years in Army ROTC when he was an undergraduate. "The military," says Anderson, "stresses hierarchy, the solution to problems through violence rather than reason, and unquestioning obedience to commands from above...
...along with Winship. Playboy takes the attitude that obscene words are not to be used for what Editorial Director A. C. Spectorsky calls "shock value or the nervous laughter they might produce, but if the editorial context calls for them, we use them." Atlantic and Harper's both feel that their audience is ready for rough language. "With our literary and sociological claims," says Atlantic Editor Robert Manning, "I see no reason why we should not make judicious use of those words if they make the difference in portraying an extreme feeling." Harper's Editor Willie Morris feels...
...purpose, along with the case for representation, is to strengthen the findings of the Fainsod Committee," Raines said. "We feel it is not too early to discuss particular issues...
Perhaps new techies do and will feel like outsiders. Even in the task-oriented group there's no such thing as instant friendship. Or perhaps, as HDC Recording Secretary and frequent producer Jenny Tarlin feels, you just have to wait for your groups, your class, to "grow up" before you feel at home...