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Word: samuel (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Samuel Chang '74, a Chinese student from Taiwan who was interviewed for the documentary, said that the crew asked him to avoid any mention of political issues...

Author: By Marion B. Lennihan, | Title: Taiwan TV Crew Films Documentary Here | 3/2/1972 | See Source »

...come under fire from opponents of abortion who question the morality of using tissue from aborted fetuses. But Ammann sees no ethical problems in his operation. "We don't go around soliciting abortions," he says. "These are abortions that are already being done for other reasons." Dr. Samuel Kountz, a kidney specialist at the U.C. Medical Center, would like to try an even bolder operation-the transplant of a fetal kidney...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A Thymus for Maggie | 2/28/1972 | See Source »

...fine sense of ironic melodrama. Obviously pleased. Yevtushenko bowed out snapping his fingers. An amused audience applauded. If the role of the poet along with that of the intellectual is to raise and not stoop to the public's standards. Yevtushenko came closest to that responsibility with this poem. Samuel Johnson thought poetry should teach by delighting its audience, not that these two values of poetry--the instructive and the entertaining--should be separate or conjunctive. Most often Yevtushenko's performance attempted to do one or the other, and frequently it struck wholly unresponsive chords as it submarined below...

Author: By Richard Dey, | Title: Yevtushenko: Lightweight in a Heavyweight's Garden | 2/28/1972 | See Source »

...public service, the Crimson is reprinting in its entirety this controversial article by Samuel P. Huntington, Thomson Professor Government. It is hoped that the article will add perspective to the Crimson's recent comments on Professor Huntington's work. "Viet Nam: The Bases of Accommodation" is reprinted by permission from Foreign Affairs, July 1968. Copyright held by the Council on Foreign Relations, Inc., New York. Part II will appear in tomorrow's Crimson...

Author: By Samuel P. Huntington, | Title: Viet Nam: The Bases of Accommodation | 2/22/1972 | See Source »

...POLITICAL FIGURES still at Harvard have been the subject of as much fruitless controversy as Samuel P. Huntington. Accusing him of complicity in the U.S. war effort, Huntington's critics, here and elsewhere, suggest that he has supported or furthered American military policy in Vietnam. With equal venom, Huntington has responded that he could never have been involved in such nasty activity, and has impugned the sincerity of his critics. Others, taking a more detached view, suggest that Huntington's role will not be evident until the full written record of the war is available, but even the record will...

Author: By David Landau, | Title: Huntington: A Reconsideration | 2/15/1972 | See Source »

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