Word: labelers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Forman's implications that black students should begin to think in terms of action as acquiring elite professional skills. But Hall also--importantly and rightly--calls the militants on a seeming distrust of academics. Hall's faith is in a joint project of study and action. He refuses the label "sellout." The label has put other black students too quickly on the defensive. One hopes that white colleges will increasingly provide an education that can be geared to produce black leaders...
Under whatever label, Harrington still puts in compulsive 16-hour days carrying his message to labor unions, college kids, civil rights groups and social-welfare organizations. He makes about ten speeches a month, and will be a principal speaker at the Poor People's March in Washington this month. Greying and intense, he delivers the word like an old-line Socialist trained by Jesuits...
...company now anticipates at least 200 new sales as a result. Founder-Owner Heinz Nixdorf, 43, has also completed his first corporate takeover: he recently acquired the Cologne firm of Wanderer-Werke, a leading manufacturer of office equipment that had been selling Nixdorf computers under a Wanderer label...
...effect of punishment on learning, Milgram had subjects shock a "student" (actually a member of the experimental team) when the "student" erred in a prescribed task. Although the "student" never actually received a shock, the subjects were asked to administer the punishment in increasing voltages. The voltages were labeled "slight shock," "very strong shock," "danger: severe shock," and so on, ending with the label "XXX". A high proportion of the subjects actually worked up to administering an "XXX" shock, even though they heard the "student" screaming...
...hearing Thursday, who agreed not to issue a complaint if the Divinity School students and their runaways cleared out of Somerville by midnight. This enforcement of the letter of the law echoes the campaign Cambridge has waged against Avatar, and the Somerville officials' pristine distaste for those they label undesirables is particularly loathesome. Once off Somerville's streets, the runaways do cease to be Somerville's problem, but the effect of the city's action is to obstruct the efforts of those trying to help the youths...