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...letter was written by Eric Seitz, a Berkeley student. Seitz said Sunday that the pledge to violate the law might threaten the signers' admission to local bar associations. Members of New York bar character committees declined to comment on Seitz's statement Monday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Thirty-One Law Students Declare 'We Won't Go' in Letter on Draft | 12/13/1967 | See Source »

...Haroz said last night that Seitz's statement was "much too pessimistic." And local draft boards will probably not take any punitive action because no law has been violated and no draft processes have been obstructed, he added...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Thirty-One Law Students Declare 'We Won't Go' in Letter on Draft | 12/13/1967 | See Source »

...contemporary art. He is also the primary personification of a growing race of creators who have discarded modeling clay in favor of blueprints, the chisel in favor of the welding torch, and Vulcan's forge for a sheet-metal fabrication shop. This is the era, says William Seitz, organizer of the U.S. show at the São Paulo Bienal, of "sculptors without studios-sculptors who have their drawings turned into steel at a factory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sculpture: Master of the Monumentalists | 10/13/1967 | See Source »

...virtuosity, and more outrageous than ever before. No fewer than 65 countries, ranging from Trinidad-Tobago to the Soviet Union, sent 4,132 works of art. The U.S.'s lavish convocation of nearly 20 popartists' work, called "Environment U.S.A.," was selected by Brandeis University's William Seitz and bankrolled by the Smithsonian; it is easily the biggest crowd pleaser of the lot, although only one American, Jasper Johns, won a minor ($2,220) award. The U.S. exhibit, with its garish colors, ghoulish assemblages and grotesque figures, comes across as an eerie, lunar, angst-filled anti-advertisement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Exhibitions: Shape for the Future | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

Impressive Advisers. To gain academic respect, Winstead first acquired an impressive advisory board that will screen all faculty appointments and help set academic policy. Prestigious it is: members include James R. Killian Jr., chairman of the M.I.T. Corporation; Frederick Seitz, president of the National Academy of Sciences; Emilio Segrè, Berkeley's Nobel Laureate in physics; Athelstan Spilhaus, former dean of the University of Minnesota's Institute of Technology. That kind of backing helped Winstead overcome a handicap of most new schools: lack of accreditation. Impressed by the credentials of Nova's advisers, the Southern Association...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Universities: Novel Ideas at Nova U. | 6/30/1967 | See Source »

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