Word: socialized
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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DAVID RIESMAN, Ford Professor of the Social Sciences, is quoted as espousing a "backlash" theory to explain Klemesrud's somewhat shaky observation that women are once again heading for the clothes racks in search of sexy duds. Riesman, in a recent interview with The Crimson, explained his "theory" was formed spontaneously when Klemesrud told him that women were once again becoming sex objects. He referred mainly to one of the more sensitive and critical problems with the women's movement. Primarily, Riesman says that some "women have felt pushed around, made to feel square," by radical feminists who were trying...
...appointed by the various deans. Only the undergraduate is elected. There is only one undergraduate position on the committee of 14 (12 voting members) and there is not a single position for a non-faculty employee. Most of the appointed members are specialists in certain areas of the social sciences. Both this semester and last, two-thirds of all ACSR members are from business, economics, government and law, in spite of a letter of protest to President Bok last spring from the Undergraduate Committee on Shareholder Responsibility. While training in these areas does not make members immoral, it tends...
...extremely competent management investors and I am sure the administration has professionals to deal with other facets of these subjects. Not only is the ACSR's concentration on them inappropriate, it is dysfunctional. The ACSR was set up in response to student demands for a group to investigate the social and moral aspects of Harvard's actions and lack thereof. Although social consequences are sometimes discussed, they tend to appear secondary and the discussions are largely superficial. When the question that Harvard might be sued was raised, ACSR members discussed the negative fiscal and legal consequences of action for Harvard...
...summary, due to the composition and method of selection of members of the ACSR, the committee fails in its purpose of investigating the moral side of Harvard's decisions. Instead it delivers the same views as the administration, only with an invalid stamp of "social responsibility...
...biographer ever accused Hanfstaengl of being a complex man. Phelps found him a "little shallow, although certainly not stupid." "He was a pseudo-cultured and not very serious....certainly politically immature" Richard Hunt, senior lecturer on social studies, adds...