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...Okinawa. The U.S. lifted 16 helicopters to the Laotian forces, deposited some 400 marines, many of them veterans of the 1958 Lebanon landings, at a base just across the border at Udon, Thailand. Around the clock, U.S. C-130 cargo transports lumbered into Bangkok, disgorging guns and ammunition for transfer to the anti-Communist Laotian troops...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: The Safety of Us All | 3/31/1961 | See Source »

...Cowards Don't Go to Jail." When most wardens detect prison recruiting, they clap the hard-core Muslims into solitary or transfer them to other prisons. "There was a time when they tended to congregate in the yard," says Warden George Goodman of the New Jersey State Prison in Trenton, "but we quickly stopped that. We may have nipped a potentially serious problem in the bud, but I cannot be sure." Oftentimes, recruiting goes right on even when the Muslim leaders are segregated. An office worker at Breathedsville was recently exposed as a Muslim. He had managed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Races: Recruits Behind Bars | 3/31/1961 | See Source »

President Bunting stresses that Radcliffe students "ought to be people that Harvard wants here. The Harvard Faculty should be more insion of transfer students. Ten years volved in our admissions process. It should have more to say about our basic admissions policy." Past attempts to add a Faculty member or two to the Committee on Admissions have ended in failure, but Mrs. Bunting intends to try again...

Author: By Mary ELLEN Gale, | Title: No Formula for 'Cliffe Admissions | 3/17/1961 | See Source »

...just as hap-ago Radcliffe accepted 25 such applicants; this year only nine were admitted. The shortage of housing space--a perennial problem since the Second World War--leaves the College with just barely enough room for the freshman class and makes a substantial number of transfers unthinkable. Describing the dilemma in 1958, Jordan declared that "fully ten per cent of the places in this college belong as of academic right" to transfer applicants who wish to major in esoteric subjects not taught elsewhere or to use expensive equipment unavailable at other colleges. He did not, however, mention a third...

Author: By Mary ELLEN Gale, | Title: No Formula for 'Cliffe Admissions | 3/17/1961 | See Source »

...regard it as a mild infection. It is frequently more than that, says Colonel Robert J. Hoagland, who began studying mono in 1946 when he was medical officer at West Point (where, as at most colleges, the disease is common) and has continued at Fort Benning, Ga., since his transfer there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Kissing Disease | 3/3/1961 | See Source »

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