Word: hispanicization
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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The greatest collection of such pre-Hispanic gold as survived the ravages of conquistador and tomb robber belongs to Bogotá's Museo del Oro. In an effort to stem the flow of these exquisitely wrought masks, figurines, pectorals and pins out of Colombia and into foreign collections, the...
Coles, a child psychiatrist and staff member of University Health Services, interrupted his work on the third volume of The Children of Crisis to give his readers a new vision of senescence. Pursuing his studies of underprivileged children in the United States, Coles went to Alberquerque, N.M. and explored how...
The children, he found, could be best understood by first speaking with the grandparents. What they believe, the children will soon believe. Parents are the go-betweens, handing down beliefs from the very old to the very young. In sharp contrast to the current American preoccupation with youth, this elderly...
At the same time as Starr, with his 20th century values, is sympathetic to the dreams of Californians, he is quick to point out the false and narrow ideals Californians often had. London's delusions are only one example in the long history of the California mind going astray. The...
James S. Ackerman, professor of Fine Arts; Rudolf Arnheim, professor of the Psychology of Art; Emaque Anderson-Imbert, Thomas Professor of Hispanic, American Literature; Kenneth J. Arrow, professor of Economics; W. B. Berthoff, professor of English; Winslow R. Briggs, professor of Biology; E. Bruce Brooks, assistant professor of Chinese; Thomas...