Word: attacker
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...thought about all this as I sat by George's hospital bed last fall. He had just had a heart attack three days before that, but he seemed to be stronger now. His face looked healthy; it had a tautness and tone that I hadn't seen for a long time. When I first saw him at Preservation Hall, every muscle and vein in his face tensed and pulsed with his music...
...started telling me about his heart attack. "It was like a little pain in my chest. And then a great big pain like that," he clapped his hands suddenly, "and I was out." He smiled. "That would have been a good way to go, too. So fast." A nurse had given him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and a chest massage and saved his life...
There should be no shortage of talent next year, either. The attack is returning intact, with Cle Landolt and Phil Zuckerman combining with Ince. Zuckerman is fourth in Ivy League scoring to give the Crimson one of the most potent attacks in the circuit. The midfield returnees in addition to Regan are Rick Frisbee and the sophomore third line of Bucky Hayes, Charley Scott, and Ted Rumsey, the boy with the flashy motorcycle. Harvard's defensive unit was statistically about the most porous in the league, though it did not really seem that weak at all. Don Gogel, Bill Bennett...
...will cause much reflection about the aims and methods of social science, and discussion of it in no way challenges academic freedom. But when the issues are obscured by a veil of polemic, reasoned discussion becomes impossible. Academic freedom suffers because researchers are threatened with or subjected to personal attack for doing studies which are perceived as inimical to someone's or some group's interest...
...Harvard Administration? President Pusey's Committtee of Five to investigate "possible misconduct" by faculty members in connection with recent events is an intolerable affront to the faculty and to the Harvard community at large. For an administration with as much blood on its own hands to launch such an attack is as ludicrous as it is contemptible. I suggest a Committee of Five (or 15 or 5,000) to investigate, repudiate, and discipline the Harvard Administration. David Griffiths Teaching Fellow in Physics