Word: sanger
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...York Times' newsroom graphics editor, was honored--along with the Time's staff members who covered the Challenger disaster and its aftermath--for national reporting. David E. Sanger 82, who wrote for the Crimson while...
...Margaret Sanger defined liberation in a different way--as the struggle to have freedom from constant childbeating With a choice between abstention from sex and complete dedication to motherhood, women could never be truly free Sanger, having seen the proliberation of unwanted babies and the horrendous effects of sloppy abortions on New York's East Side, began the fight for the availability of female contraception Sanger brought the diaphragm to the United States and opened a clinic in New York an offense for which she spent 30 days in fall. Throught her efforts knowledge about birth control became widespread...
Women, of course, did not always want to be faced with the new choices which Sanger's activities created. And Forster says that winning the vote produced complaceney. The feminist movement then needed an ideology to propel it Forster credits Emma Goldman, a Lithuanian immigrant to the United States who was active in the anarchist movement with providing this ideology According to Goldman real emancipition begins in the soul after all the outer traps have been removed, internal tyrannies still keep women in subjection...
...what they want at the right price, they bide their time until prices drop. Says Ann Colwell, 28, a Dallas publicist: "It's a consumer-oriented Christmas," as if somehow it rarely had been until this year. She is waiting for Evan-Picone suits at Sanger Harris to go on sale. When they do, she will buy. Said Martin Tolep, economist for F.W. Woolworth: "By waiting, they're going to make some retailers frantic...
...amidst this congregation of students with different interests and perspectives, there were separate, and perhaps self-enclosed, worlds of their own. Rosenthal says that people who paid no particular attention would hardly know that finals clubs existed. Sirjay Sanger '56, a psychiatrist living in New York, readily admits that his overriding goal at college was to succeed in his pre-med courses and gain acceptance to a medical school. But, he describes people with entirely opposite aspirations and ideals. "It was clear to me from the first day who was going into family business, law, power, and who was going...