Word: salazarism
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Lucy F.V. Lindsey ’06 and Nicole A. Salazar ’06 e-mailed looking for students to relate personal experiences, be part of a group discussion and even appear in the act on camera...
Lindsey and Salazar said they were motivated to pursue their topic because masturbation has sparked so much interest among so many people...
...came across a 16th century lawsuit filed by descendants of Pachacuti seeking the return of royal family lands, including a retreat called Picchu. Over the years, other researchers have dug deeper into the mystery, none deeper than Burger, a onetime student of Rowe's, and his wife Lucy Salazar, a Yale archaeologist...
Burger and Salazar undertook fresh interpretations of tools and dwellings and concluded that Machu Picchu was heavily populated by craftsmen, probably brought there by the royals to tend to their material needs. Facial studies of recovered skulls reveal a healthy stew of ethnic groups, pointing to a multicultural mix of servants as opposed to a uniform class of priests. Skeletal analyses conducted by physical anthropologist John Verano of Tulane University, one of Burger and Salazar's collaborators, show that the ratio of females to males was a comparatively even 3 to 2 and that families and even infants lived...
...UFOlogists like Shirley MacLaine, who famously claimed to have had an out-of-body experience on Machu Picchu. But even the truest believers will have time to get used to the idea. An exhibition of 420 Incan artifacts--354 of them from Machu Picchu--curated by Burger and Salazar, opened last month at Yale's Peabody Museum, where it will remain until May 4. Then it begins a two-year tour of Los Angeles; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Denver; Houston; and Chicago. The exhibit makes for riveting history--even if it's not Indiana Jones. --Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York