Word: hilliards
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Adams is a member of a loose-knit consortium of Afrocentrists and "melanin scholars" that includes Leonard Jeffries, the controversial chairman of black studies at City College in New York; Wade Nobles, a psychology professor at San Francisco State University; Asa Hilliard, a professor at Georgia State University; and other black scholars and psychiatrists. These "melanists," Ortiz de Montellano writes in the latest issue of the Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, provide a supposedly scientific explanation for the excessive claims of Afrocentrism...
...Oregonian is sensitive to the feelings of those in our society who are rightly offended today by names and nicknames that came into being when a majority in this country was insensitive to minority concerns," explains Oregonian editor William A. Hilliard. Such stereotypes "damage the dignity and self-respect of many people in our society." He hinted that the paper would not rule out the possibility that other team nicknames could be added to the banned list...
...Northeastern 1 6 0 1 54 2 19 17 4 HARVARD 1 0 5 0 0 0 4 10 8 3 Home Runs--N.U., Charpentier, Harvard, none. Northeastern IP H R ER BBK Nicklas 1.7 4 4 4 1 1 Hilliard 1 3 5 0 3 1 Santucci (W) 4.3 1 1 1 1 0 HARVARD IP H R ER BB K Forman (L) 1 5 7 3 1 1 Desrocher 2.7 2 1 1 2 2 Rau 1 3 5 3 0 1 Donahue 0.7 4 4 3 0 0 Hurley...
...much that we need to make ends meet," says Jon Hilliard, his three-year-old at his side. Hilliard works for the Street Department in Crown Point, Ind., and as a self-employed carpenter. His wife Sharron is a gym teacher, and together they earn something over $60,000 a year. "It's the way we get extra things. I grew up in a poor family with four kids, and we had no extras. There's no way my kids are going to be like that. We want to make sure that if they're not good athletes or smart...
...Hilliard, a manufacturing engineer at the Japanese-owned Nissan truck plant in Smyrna, Tenn., has no doubt that the Japanese unfairly keep out American goods. Nissan has sent him to Japan three times for training, where, he reports, "I saw very few American products on the market there, whereas here Japanese products are all over the place." Consequently, he believes the "U.S. Government is justified" in placing restrictions on Japanese imports. Yet Hilliard has praise for the management methods of his employer. Nissan's profits in Smyrna are down, he says, because "parts from Japan cost much more than they...