Word: galvin
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...known as "the human-potentials movement"-"a dedicated quest," as the story explains, "conducted in hundreds of ways and places, to redefine, amplify and enrich the spirit of social man." Much of the reportage on the East Coast and in the Middle West was provided by Ruth Mehrtens Galvin, while in Los Angeles Eleanor Hoover viewed the movement through her experience as a onetime psychologist for the Veterans Administration. Further attended came from Reporter Andrea Svedberg, who attended a ten-day course on various aspects of the movement at Esalen Institute. During one act discussion, the psychiatrist suggested that each...
...story on Kate Millett and the Women's Liberation movement. In most instances it turned out to be a rewarding assignment. "Kate Millett and the others I saw really do treat other women as sisters, trying to help them. They were kind, thoughtful and cooperative," says Ruth Mehrtens Galvin, who led the reporting team...
...Anthropologist Lionel Tiger, 43, has been ridiculed in Women's Liberation publications for his theories on the reasons for male political domination. The author of Men in Groups, a professor at Rutgers and married, with one child, Tiger last week discussed Sexual Politics with TIME Correspondent Ruth Mehrtens Galvin. Among his observations on Author Kate Millett and her theses...
Written by Contributing Editor Ruth Brine, and reported by both Ruth and Correspondent Ruth Mehrtens Galvin, the story was edited by Senior Editor Robert Shnayerson and researched by Virginia Adams. The idea was conceived when Ruth Brine moved to Manhattan's Upper West Side last fall. "I saw those rows and rows of motionless old people sitting all day long on the benches on the smelly traffic island that stretches all the way up Broadway," she recalls. "I also began to be aware that my friends were spending as much time discussing what to do about their parents...
...behavioral sciences have been Ruth Galvin's beat since 1969, when she returned to Boston after H years in our London bureau and asked to be allowed to do specialized rather than general reporting. "I was delighted when BEHAVIOR was suggested," she says, "but my friends and associates think it's hilarious. After all, BEHAVIOR means specializing in everything." Since then, she has covered many subjects, including man's animal nature, black antiSemitism, infant intelligence, achievement processes in business, homosexuality, autistic children and the influence of dreams on learning. In 1949, the late author John P. Marquand...