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Word: validator (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...thought that wasn't valid," Bennett said. "Anybody can eat glass." After he took an initial chomp out of a bulb, others at the party said they wanted...

Author: By Mark C. Frazier, | Title: Lightbulb Eaters Spread Hobby Here | 5/7/1973 | See Source »

...horrified the world because they were designed to answer unethical questions like "How long can a human being survive in ice cold water?" Specific facets of such research become irrelevant. In many ways the current research is umpteen times worse, because the research is performed under the guise of valid scientific curiousity in the spirit of progressive medicine...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Guinea Pigs, the Poor, et al. | 4/27/1973 | See Source »

Dialogue. That concern faded almost as soon as Brandt, in a blue suit and orange tie, marched up to the blue and orange podium in Hannover. "This Congress has to confirm explicitly that what the Social Democrats said before the election is valid for them after the election," he said. "Whoever does not occupy the center cannot hold the majority in a democracy; whoever loses the center cannot govern." Blasting Juso calls for an American troop withdrawal, he said: "Without America's presence, we would not be able to negotiate realistically on European security ... But our American partners have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WEST GERMANY: Waxing Roth | 4/23/1973 | See Source »

...review of a posthumous collection of Sylvia Plath's play and poems has some points to make about what's wrong with the tendencies of contemporary poetry-writers. He complains about the endless, pointless description that bad writers insist on producing and after clearing Plath of the usually valid suspicions brought to confessional poetry, Leib makes a hopeful statement about the pointlessness of making apologies for poetry when "the art awaits." But he obviously isn't too happy about what poets are writing, and neither is Richard Dey. In the issue Dey has five poems (the best an elegy...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Dog Days for Younger Poets | 4/11/1973 | See Source »

ALMOST HALF THE contributors to this Advocate are Harvard students, and a few more are recent graduates-a healthy change for the magazine, and one that makes the issue a more than usually valid one for seeing what student writers are and aren't accomplishing. Dwight C. Barnaby's first chapter from a forthcoming novel (Durftenfaust) is too short to demonstrate more than a snatch of potential, but Alice Van Buren's "Twelve O'clock" (another first chapter) does more. It begins the memoirs of a self-pitying, broken-down, and impotent young Bohemian painter who's retreated...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Dog Days for Younger Poets | 4/11/1973 | See Source »

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