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...Jerry Walters, "living on campus in dormitories is in." Off-campus, do-your-thing pads have given way to the practical fact that campus quarters tend to be cheaper and more convenient. "Students want to be closer to campus and involved in campus activity," says B.U. Housing Director Marcus Buckley. "They want to study and not worry about the heat or their next meal." The bottom line, again, may be the reality of getting ready for that job. Says Dean Mary Ackerman of Macalester College in St. Paul: "There is more concern about careers, about what awaits them after graduation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Year the Ghosts Showed Up | 11/5/1984 | See Source »

According to Elizabeth Buckley, construction coordinator for the Sackler, the migration of artwork will be "at a slow and easy pace," with each collection transported separately. Acting Director of the Fogg John Rosenfield terms it an "inconvenience," but says, "The new building is designed to work with or without the bridge." The Museum's security staff will supervise the operation, and Buckley says the Museum rented a van to move the faculty offices, library materials, and early Christian Coptic reliefs into the new building...

Author: By Jennifer A. Kingson, | Title: Warehouse or Museum? | 10/22/1984 | See Source »

...colored on the right. The dwindling band of liberal columnists, the liveliest of whom is Mary McGrory, frequently write like glum recyclers of views no longer in vogue. Right-wingers are apt to be more ardent proselyters, some using the eruditely disdainful style of arguing they learned on Bill Buckley's National Review...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newswatch Thomas Griffith: Leave Off the Label | 9/17/1984 | See Source »

...unethical as to be un-American," he wrote last week. Safire also fumed about the "Fundamentalist intolerance" he found at the Dallas convention, and declared that "no President . . .has done more to marshal the political clout of these evangelicals than Ronald Reagan-to his historic discredit." William F. Buckley Jr., however, in a column last week, defended the President. Wrote Buckley: "Reagan is certainly attempting to attract the vote of those who believe they are being unfairly persecuted by the secularists, and why shouldn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: For God and Country: Walter Mondale | 9/10/1984 | See Source »

Many delegates attacked the U.S. policy as an election-year move designed to appeal to conservatives and Catholic voters loyal to the Vatican's antiabortion stance. Buckley strenuously denied the charge. Said he: "Ronald Reagan's views on abortion have been known since long before he was President, so he has already alienated those who support abortion and gained support from pro-lifers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Population: A Debate over Sovereign Rights | 8/20/1984 | See Source »

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