Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...aspect of pornography (or, if you will, erotic fantasy material) that is seldom mentioned is the myth that men regard sex as a strictly physical act, while women need "romance" to tolerate it. As a result, sexual fantasies for men keep getting more and more "gross" in attempts to escape the "female" force of emotion. And although there is a growing tide of erotic fantasy material for women, most of it is still steeped in the mushy, false-romantic mode that women have always been conditioned to like. The need for emotion and physical pleasure exists...
...there was such frequent resort to humiliation as a penalty. Stocks, pillory, and tar and feathers were effective because the opinion of one's townsmen was so important. The colonists paid a price for government by communal consensus: there was not much privacy, and what we now regard as liberties of conscience often existed only at the pleasure of public opinion...
...administration is likely to regard these suggestions in much the same manner as it currently regards affirmative action. Letting individual faculty members support it in print and in lectures, but avoiding compliance in practice. Harvard recommends integration to others, but for its own projects chooses nice elderly people instead of low income tenants. Diana K. Appelbaum
Schreiner does not believe that only women wish to deny their sexuality. He says, "If you regard severe impotence as an expression of fear of sexuality and denial of sexuality then I'm sure if anorexia is common at Radcliffe, impotence is rampant at Harvard...
...million more jobs than Ford's proposals. But whatever they may say publicly some top Administration officials are prepared to live with the committees' overall totals. They have said privately that they would be "very pleased" with any spending figure under $415 billion. Indeed, many economists regard the congressional figures as about the minimum necessary to produce a 5% to 6% economic growth during 1977 and keep unemployment declining (it inched down again in March to 7.5% of the labor force, from 7.6% in February...