Word: sexe
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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SNAKE DOING IN THE STARLET'S BED?) to slick women's magazines such as Ladies' Home Journal, which inquired recently: ARE WE COMMERCIALIZING SEX? (Conclusion: "Maybe.") Many other mass-circulation magazines have joined the fad for question mark journalism, and in recent months have popped brain-rattling questions ranging from WAR GETTING CLOSER? (Answer: Few governments "now rule it out") to HOW WILL THE BIRD FLY?, a report on the stock market that concluded sagely: "There was solid ground for fogbound uncertainty." In McGraw-Hill's Business Week, an inquiring headline writer last week achieved...
...great a problem" in stroke victims as in coronary artery disease, said Dr. Wright. A stroke may either precede or follow a heart attack: the two are often associated, and the same patient is likely to have atherosclerosis in both cerebral and coronary arteries. As in heart disease, female sex hormones seem to exert a protective effect (reflected in the relative immunity of premenopausal women), but they cannot be given to men without feminizing them. Needed: a synthetic hormone that affords protection without feminization. Several laboratories are trying to produce...
...stocky and only 5 ft. 8½ in. tall. The jaw is powerful, the skin rough and swart, the profile jutting and rudely masculine, the lips sensitively curved and humorous. At a glance from Bernstein, men recognize an extraordinary personality, and women acquire the expression of poleaxed sheep; he exudes sex appeal like a leaky electric eel. He chooses his clothes with care ? the Italian shoe of exotic cut, the chesterfield with the velvet collar, the bright red sweater that makes his eyes seem green. And when he decides to give somebody the full charge of charm, the eyes glow...
Pitirim A. Sorokin, professor of Sociology, continued his attack on an oversexed American society Thursday night on a New York television program, "Night Beat." Sorokin has presented this view in his recently published American Sex Revolution...
...been granted to the young ladies of Radcliffe, and not to Harvard men. If Radcliffe chooses to operate its boarding house on the honor system, that is not Harvard's concern. But when an academic privilege is granted to a group of students differentiated from the others only by sex (not by honor) than the chivalry of the University has perhaps been carried too far. Duane J. Murner '58 Louis J. Gonnella...