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...CRIMSON of that spring referred to Bunting's "growing reputation as an autocrat," and ran editorials strongly denouncing her. One of them said, "There is evidence, in fact, to suggest that Mrs. Bunting has consistently disregarded widespread student opposition to her pet project... Mrs. Bunting's repeated refrain at Radcliffe Government Association meetings, that Radcliffe is run both by its students and administrators, has always been a deception. And always will...

Author: By Deborah B. Johnson, | Title: Mary Bunting: The Porch Light Was On | 2/22/1971 | See Source »

...national vote unless some catastrophe strikes Italy, and the Communists claim they do not want that to happen. They have abandoned their old slogan, "Tanto peggio, tanto meglio" (The worse it is, the better it is for us), and often cooperate to help pass important bills (or at least refrain from sabotaging them). Deputy-Secretary Enrico Berlinguer, 48, Longo's designated successor, hopes to make the Communist Party the nucleus of a "new majority" of the left that would include left-wing Christian Democrats and Socialists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Europe: The Revolution That Failed | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

...Shortly after Dutschke was shot in the head by a right-wing assassin in West Berlin nearly three years ago, the fiery radical student leader was granted permission to recuperate in Britain. James Callaghan, then Home Secretary in Harold Wilson's Labor government, imposed one condition-that Dutschke refrain from any political activity. Suffering from partial blindness and frequent epileptic attacks, Dutschke settled in Cambridge with his American wife and two small children. After Labor's defeat in last June's national elections, Maudling re-examined the Dutschke case on behalf of the new Tory government...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: This Miserable Little Case | 2/1/1971 | See Source »

...defend his actions as a matter involving national security, some of the deliberations were held in secret, and Dutschke was not even informed of the evidence against him. The tribunal held that while Dutschke did not pose "any appreciable threat to national security," he violated his commitment to refrain from political activity by meeting with radicals in Britain and by traveling to Calais and Berlin to confer with like-minded revolutionaries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: This Miserable Little Case | 2/1/1971 | See Source »

...open and frank" to, in Mr. Bryce's words, "refrain from publicizing many internal difficulties and contradictions that we stumbled upon," particularly in regard to money? No member of PBH was ever presented with these difficulties. The subcommittee report also suggests that PBH misused the original Faculty of Arts and Sciences subsidy for central administrative costs instead of for consultants. A brief look at the PBH correspondence with Dean Ford, of which the subcommittee had copies, would have made clear that the original subsidy was always earmarked for such items as postage, automobile and travel expenses, and other central costs...

Author: By Barry Oconnell, | Title: On the Other Hand ... PBH-Did the CSCR Tell All? | 1/18/1971 | See Source »

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