Word: hite
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...soloists--Ellen Hargis, soprano, Laurie Monahan, mezzo soprano, William Hite, Frank Kelley and Arthur Rishi, tenors, and Paul Guttry and David Ripley, bass--were superb as well. Hargis was particularly impressive; she is a specialist in pre-Baroque music, and it shows. She captured the Renaissance style perfectly, demonstrating complete control over her voice so that there was no excessive vibrato, yet no shrill tone. Also greatly enjoyable was the tenor dialogue in the Audi coelum (IX), in which Hite sang his responses to Kelley from the balcony...
...authorized; if they didn't, we would have people wearing a chestful of medals and looking like a Russian general. Awards and decorations are very prized possessions to individuals who have earned them. It is a shame to have their importance diminished in a situation such as this. LAWRENCE HITE, CWO, U.S. Army (ret.) Wauseon, Ohio...
...rewarding of human functions," as TIME wrote in 1970. The subject then was Masters and Johnson's book Human Sexual Inadequacy, one of four studies of Americans' sex habits to which TIME has devoted cover stories. The others: Alfred Kinsey's Sexual Behavior in the Human Female (1953), Shere Hite's Woman and Love, a Cultural Revolution in Progress (1987) and The Social Organization of Sexuality, the University of Chicago study that is the subject of this week's cover...
...women had made the vertical Long March to respectability in the office and the bedroom, but according to Hite, they felt abused and desperately confused. The book's statistics and haranguing tone troubled TIME writer Claudia Wallis. Yet under the sheer hype, she discovered a bitter truth that transcended sexual specifics. "Women are finding that they cannot have it all," concluded Wallis. "They are staggering under the burden of trying to be all things to all people -- the nurturing parent, the successful ) careerist, the sexual athlete. Today they are asking men to play all these roles...
...seven years later, Wallis, a senior editor, has supervised our cover on the Chicago sex survey. "There's a world of difference between this week's study and Hite's in 1987," she says. "Hite was provocative, eager to shock, but there were serious credibility problems with her data. Her report probably reflected more about her notion of the war between the sexes than about anything that was happening between the sheets. This Chicago survey has the feel of science. It may not be gospel, but it's the closest thing we've had to an honest picture of America...