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...wasn't really that good, either. The best Dylan material I've heard in a long while is on a bootleg record, which is sporadically available around the Square. Entitled Looking Back on the Zerocks label, this two-record set features live recordings of an acoustic Berkeley concert in late 1965 or early 1966 and the electric Royal Albert Hall concert from Dylan's last British tour. The recording quality on both is excellent, particularly on the electric sides, on which the Band plays back-up. The combination of Dylan and the Band makes this the definitive Dylan rock...

Author: By Andy Klein, | Title: Some of the New Stuff | 10/20/1971 | See Source »

...vanguard of this new attack is a national coalition of 60 lawyers and 700 scientists called the Environmental Defense Fund. Financed mainly by $10-a-year dues from 25,000 supporters, E.D.F. operates out of East Setauket, N.Y., and has branches in Washington, D.C., and Berkeley, Calif. Its philosophy is summarized by William Butler, a lawyer in the Washington office: "Environmentalists have cried wolf too often. We don't make a legal move unless scientists are sure of their ground...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Sue the Bastards | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

...suited to the Minsky circuit. Kids of all ages would call it a vulgar rip-off from the Story Theater (TIME, March 1), which has been far more sensitively translated to TV by Creator Paul Sills in a syndicated commercial series. CRITIC-AT-LARGE is a quarter-hour with Berkeley Associate Professor of Journalism David Littlejohn, 34, putting his bite, or perhaps overbite, on subjects ranging from Stravinsky to TV Guide, Disneyland to Solzhenitsyn. Like so much of public TV, Critic-at-Large is just a video version of a show just as well left to radio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: The Public Season | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

...consider television their prime source of news. According to yet another survey, however, TV newscasts usually go in one rabbit ear and out the other. Telephoning TV viewers after a newscast, Andrew Stern, a former ABC News staffer now on the journalism faculty of the University of California at Berkeley, found that 51% of those who had listened could not recall even one of the show's 19 items. Among all those called, the average memory rate was one item. (The calls were made over a period ranging from immediately after the show's sign...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: What Was That? | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

This week the American Council of Learned Societies is releasing the first major study of religion graduate programs, prepared by the Rev. Dr. Claude Welch, the dean of Berkeley's Graduate Theological Union, and financed by the Henry Luce Foundation. Welch not only takes an informed, opinionated look at religion studies, but dares to suggest that about one-third of the nation's graduate religion departments should go out of business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Boom in Religion Studies | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

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