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Students at Brown filled out their programs with elective courses from established fields. There was a flurry of innovation in the '50's with the creation of "Identification and Criticism of Ideas" (IC) Courses and then of University Courses in 1958. The latter were upper-level integrative efforts, and four of them (like "Technology and the Moral Order" and "Conceptions of Man") still survive as part of the school's new curriculum. But the IC Courses-small-group interdisciplinary courses-were not part of the required curriculum, and with ered away...

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

Crises elsewhere may flourish and then fade, but West Berlin persists as the West's perennial and most exposed pressure point. Isolated 110 miles inside hostile East Germany, militarily indefensible and dependent for econom ic survival on easily sundered access routes, it is the place where the cold war began 21 years ago-and where the Communists refuse to let it die. Last week Berlin was once again the center of an incipient crisis. By a sudden decree, the East German regime of Stalinist Walter Ulbricht barred a large number of West German legislators and all military personnel from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: ONCE MORE, TROUBLE IN BERLIN | 2/21/1969 | See Source »

...most people today, the word brings to mind a fetchingly skimpy swimsuit. Few now recall that Bikini was the site of the world's fourth atom ic detonation and the cradle of the hydrogen bomb. It has been 22 years since the atoll's docile people were banished by the atom, and gentling nature and the passage of time have leached away Bikini's residual radiation. Lush vegetation once more covers the island. Through their long exile, most of it on inhospitable, isolated, mosquito-plagued Kili Island, the 300 or so Bikinians have huddled in a beachfront...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Pacific: They Want to Go Back to Bikini | 6/7/1968 | See Source »

...feet bloodied, her hair blowing, Eliza jumped from ice floe to ice floe, not stopping until, "as in a dream," she had left Kentucky behind and found herself safe on the Ohio side of the Ohio River. Contrary to the myth ic and dramatic versions of folklore, Harriet Beecher Stowe's heroine was not actually pur sued by bloodhounds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Congress: Biting the Bloodhounds | 11/24/1967 | See Source »

...signs came. The mercurial Rumanians, whose Latin origins may have instilled a certain coolness toward Slav ic influences, swept the box office clean of tickets for the Californians' two concerts. The black market became so brisk that scalpers were buying from each other, and at one concert, 600 crashers forced their way in. The next night the Russians played; there were enough empty spaces in the hall to drive a tractor around in, and the crowd dwindled further at intermission. It wasn't that Conductor Kiril Kondrashin had given a poor concert; it was just that the exuberance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Orchestras: Bucharest Battle | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

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