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...resolution on research, approving a report written by a committee under the direction of Harvey Brooks, dean of Engineering and Applied Physics, was a codification of existing explicit and implicit Faculty policies. It contains no new restrictions and was passed with little debate...

Author: By M. S. K. and M. K. R., S | Title: Faculty Okays New Degree And Sets Research Limits | 12/2/1970 | See Source »

...maintains that there are two films to be made: another of the type "Nixon-Paramount" has been ordering for fifty years-a Western, an adventure film, any film that clings to the idea of realistic representation; or a militant film, a film whose anti-representational form challenges the ideology implicit in that same old Western...

Author: By Joel Haycock, | Title: Godard Wind From The East at Emerson 105, Saturday and Sunday | 11/7/1970 | See Source »

...accustomed to such images. But the sign system by which we read these images is an ideology of the class in power. Whenever a conscious formal design does not structure our reading of an image, we have fallen into "the ideology of real life" ( Gai Savoir ), i.e., the implicit ideology in the bourgeois way of seeing. The first step for the revolutionary moviemaker is, as Juliet Berto says in Savoir, "to dissolve sounds and images." "The ear is the eye's politburo...

Author: By Joel Haycock, | Title: Godard Wind From The East at Emerson 105, Saturday and Sunday | 11/7/1970 | See Source »

...least change) that has appeared in 20th century America. Obversely, a number of businessmen, while transforming the society by automobiles, advertising, computers and urbanization, refer to themselves as conservatives, a term suggesting opposition to change. Almost any so-called radical utterance these days will contain an explicit or implicit rejection of the mainstream of change during the past 150 years, together with a longing for a future society conceived as a static Elysium. As for the modern liberal position, it has been more noted for restraining (sometimes wisely, sometimes foolishly) the forces of change than for stimulating or liberating them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: POLITICS AND THE NAME GAME | 11/2/1970 | See Source »

...haired boy dressed in red against a blue background. They feed him single words and he responds: "Aristotle"/"Red," "Circle"/"Lion." As in One Plus One's interview with Eve Democracy, we immediately begin weighing his responses for their political significance ("Revolution"/"October," "Stalin"/"Airplane.") Then, however, the problems implicit in this mode of presentation suggest themselves- problems that become more explicit in a similar interview with an old, possibly senile man. When the subject does not respond is it because the device feeding him words is faulty, or because his hearing is bad, or because words like "tenderness" simply...

Author: By Mike Prokosch, | Title: Godard's 'Le Gai Savoir' | 10/27/1970 | See Source »

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