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    Standards of Care
    The Sun InterviewBy Naomi PittsStandards of CareRolonda Donelson on Bias and Anti-Science Attitudes in Medicine

    The reason Black women were used to develop the field of gynecology was because they were no more than property. They weren’t seen as people; they were just seen as things. The controlling of Black women’s bodies started with chattel slavery, but it continues today.

    Milk
    Readers WriteBy Our ReadersMilk

    Pumped for an infant, spilled at the dinner table, used as a tear gas antidote

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Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    This Message Was Brought To You By . . .

    I make most of my money from advertising. I know, I know. A lower form of enterprise is hard for many to imagine. Especially for a writer. Well, I’ll tell you this: for a writer unencumbered by ideological purity, it can be a damn fine business.

    By David SearlsDecember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    South Africa’s Dark Heart

    South Africa first entered into the American national consciousness this past summer when the sprawling, million person ghetto of Soweto rose up in protests that the police and army quickly turned into bloody riot.

    By William GaitherDecember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    The Mountain And I

    To me the most natural form of exercise is running; to run you need no equipment but yourself, you need no shelter but the sky, you need no teacher but your instincts. Your energy goes directly into learning how to move with ease and grace.

    By David RoyleDecember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    An Open Letter To President-Elect Carter

    As a bodily illness tells us something about the body of our thoughts, so are our national ills a sign we give ourselves, a challenge we fashion for our own awakening. The relationship between leader and led is intimate and profound, a delicate feedback system the Founding Fathers intuitively understood, and which it is our challenge to understand again, and more fully. The politics of consciousness.

    By Sy SafranskyDecember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Jimmy Carter And The South

    Speaking over a year ago at Duke University, Congressman Andrew Young of Georgia made the far fetched prediction that the next President of the United States would be a Southerner. All of us at Duke thought that he was speaking of Terry Sanford. Young was speaking of his friend from Georgia.

    By William H. WillimonDecember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Right Livelihood

    Guilt And Money

    For me, business and livelihood means trying to pay my bills by doing what I enjoy doing and would probably do anyway, even if I had a more conventional job.

    By Hal RichmanNovember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Channel One

    I spend a good part of my existence avoiding “unpleasant” feelings. Especially lately, as much old pain surges up, I avoid without allowing myself the awareness that I am avoiding.

    By Leaf DiamantNovember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Energy

    Saving Money

    Hopefully we all agree by now that there is an immediate need for energy conservation. Convincing arguments can be made on economic, political, and environmental grounds for conservation. This article considers the economic basis since that’s what motivates most people.

    By Daniel R. KoenigshoferNovember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Thomas Merton’s Asian Journal

    Book Review

    What is best in the Journal is its singular beauty and clarity of vision. Singular because not just the quotes from the Buddhist and Hindu sources but the day-to-day description of people and events are sharply defined, moving, and loveable.

    By Richard WilliamsNovember 1976
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Spectrum/A Community Access Guide

    Dance: Back To The Roots

    In 1969, you could study dance in Chapel Hill either at Bounds Studio, or in a physical education class. A glance at the listing of dance classes in this section shows how that’s changed.

    By Alma BlountNovember 1976
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