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2 result(s) for "Griffith Institute, author"
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Tutankhamun : excavating the archive
This selection of fifty key items chosen by the staff of the Griffith Institute - including photographs, letters, plans, drawings and diaries - provides an accessible and authoritative overview of the excavation of Tutankhamun's tomb, and offers an intimate insight into the records of one of the world's most famous archaeological discoveries.
SCORN FOR MORALISM
[Michael A. Ledeen] has written a neoconservative foreign policy tract for our times. His three principal theses are: ''The concepts of traditional authority, including the centuries old notion of raison d'etat, have lost their sway in the United States''; ''the courts are trying to claim authority for themselves''; and ''the media have adopted an ideology that serves their own interests and weakens their opponents within the United States [and] on occasion . . . even strengthens opponents of the United States.'' The ''new class'' of the news media wants to take for itself ''the privileges that previously adhered to the old ruling classes while stripping them of their traditional rights and privileges''; in fact, ''the only real dispute among persons of intelligence and good will'' is over ''where to draw the line'' on the First Amendment and determining ''what obligations the citizenry must fulfill in exchange for the right to free speech.''