Word: pureed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Applied anthropology may be risky, but it is not wrong. Anthropologists feel the conflict between pure research and the desire to help because they have traditionally seen their role as protectors to the "weaker peoples or this world who are not articulate in standing up for themselves." Anthropologists try to represent the people they have studied to their governments, but most researchers avoid any more direct involvement in assistance programs...
THIS REACTION is one of pure frustration. The current movement is a very young one, and for much of its history it has been the property of an elite. White radicals are graduates of the 1967 march, the McCarthy campaign and the battle of Chicago. Looking back at the peace movement, one can see that many of its aims were highly elitist: to construct a coalition of anti-war politicians, professors, lawyers, doctors, writers, students and intellectuals and form a moral witness which would force the rest of the nation into an admiring submission. The Civil Rights movement-probably...
...impact, but the impact is not felt as often as Goldberg would like. He says that his campaign budget is between $1.5 and $2,000,000, and that Rockefeller will spend ten times that. The Governor's camp dismisses the claim as "pure nonsense," contending that it will spend $6,000,000 at most...
...literary topic merits. In 1939 Frost invited Lawrence Thompson, then curator of books at Princeton, to be his official biographer. Frost died in 1963 and the next year Thompson published Selected Letters in which it begins to be clear that the feelings between Frost and Thompson were not all pure affection and admiration. Four years ago Thompson finished the first volume (The Early Years) of his Definitive Biography, and this August the second installment appeared...
...Years of Triumph covers the early years of Frost's fame in England and the United States, up to the death of his wife in 1938. It describes without malice or apparent prejudice several incidents which indicate that Frost was not a benign simple rustic writing pure-hearted doggerel, but rather an impatient, frequently lazy, hyperbolic man. The reviewers were furious. Some treated the book as a personal insult. One almost-yellow journal reduced its reaction to a sixteen-point print blare, "A good poet-but a very...