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Perhaps that accounts for the man ic good spirits in which Irving was breezing through an ominous round of court hearings in Manhattan. "He's onstage," says an acquaintance. "The biggest stage he's ever been on, a stage far beyond his wildest dreams of a couple of years ago." Last week he was even turning up at Manhattan cocktail parties. When someone asked how he felt as one disastrous revelation followed another, he grinned: "It reminds me of the story of the guy who jumped off the top of the Empire State Building. About halfway down, another...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME : The Fabulous Hoax of Clifford Irving | 2/21/1972 | See Source »

...year and three months after Clinton Duffy completed his cycle by being appointed Warden of San Quentin, George Jackson was born in Chicago. The first son of parents who had made the short but tragic migration on the IC from downstate Illinois, Jackson's childhood was spent retracing their journey. During the school year, he attended St. Malachy, an internally segregated parochial school in Chicago. His summers were spent with his mother's family in the southern Illinois town of Harrisburg...

Author: By Tony Hill, | Title: It Makes a Long Time Man Feel Bad | 10/20/1971 | See Source »

There are issues "where there is no longer room for argument among people who accept our basic social-econom-ic-political system-for example, hostility to anything smacking of racism," the report said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Report Seeks New Post For 'Socially-Aware' Investments | 3/5/1971 | See Source »

WASHINGTON, May 21-Rumors that ? radicals and black militants could ?ded into concentration camps under ? 50 Internal Security Act are not ?ic, the American Civil Liberties said Thursday...

Author: By The ASSOCIATED Press, | Title: CLU Harbingers ?tention Camps | 5/22/1970 | See Source »

...says senior Susan Friedman, who has now replaced Magaziner as Brown's most active reformer, "Brown had stagnated. The student body was passive." Nothing had replaced the defunct IC Courses. Many departments had established restrictive patterns, even specified sequences, of courses for concentrators. Ordinary concentrators usually needed eight courses, honors candidates ten. The distribution requirement was more onerous than ever (two semesters in each of seven general areas, plus another year of intermediate work in an area other than that of the student's concentration). Distribution requirements were still satisfied by taking large, introductory survey courses. All courses were...

Author: By Mitchell S. Fishman, | Title: Curriculum Reform at Brown: Part I | 1/14/1970 | See Source »

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