Word: surveyers
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...certainly nurtured some of their endemic ills. One of these is a manic itch to overdress exhibitions. It is highly contagious, and now sweeps through the Whitney Museum, whose big Bicentennial show, "200 Years of American Sculpture," opened this month. This is a historically complex and potentially important survey, involving seven curators, 345 works of art and a catalogue as thick as a phone book. But in order to secure impact, the Philadelphia pop architects Venturi & Rauch were engaged to package it, while all seven curators-who chose the show's contents-were locked out of the galleries during...
...book is based on mid-1974 interviews with a national sample of 927 Catholic adults conducted by a team from the University of Chicago's National Opinion Research Center. The center conducted a similar survey in 1963, and some of the changes in Catholic attitudes it found over the decade were previously reported (TIME, Jan. 13, 1975). While the link between attitudes toward the Pope's encyclical and church decline is the book's most sensational finding, much of the new survey-as in 1963-deals with parochial schools...
...TIME survey finds that Carter's recognition among voters has increased from 41% four weeks before the New Hampshire primary to 65% at present. Among those voters who are familiar with Carter, the percentage who feel he has a good chance of becoming the Democratic candidate has increased from 18% to 45%. Of all the Democratic contenders, Carter has the most favorable acceptability ratio: 42% of the voters find him acceptable as the next President while only 23% do not. Humphrey, by comparison, is acceptable to 45% but unacceptable to 47% of the voters. Jackson is acceptable...
Though the economy has improved, the survey shows there has been only a slight increase in voters' confidence in Ford's handling of economic issues, from 66% earlier in the year...
...again in your extremely biased editorial of March 16, where you discuss "the problem of the Quad Houses' unpopularity" as if it were a terminal disease, and assume, quite unjustifiably, that most freshmen placed the Quad Houses lowest on their lists of housing preferences. As the recent housing survey shows, freshmen do not regard the Quad as a wasteland--on the contrary, the poll ranked Quad houses fourth, sixth, and eighth in popularity. Only the Crimson snobbishly assumes that the barriers are still rampant between the River, the Yard, and the Quad. I suggest that your writers remember that they...