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Word: berkeley (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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There McInally was, after all, in the College All-Star game, an Ivy League end starting against the World Champion Pittsburgh Steelers. He was basking in the glory of a national TV audience, having a great time. On the fourth play of the game, quarterback Steve Bartkowski of Berkeley hit McInally on a short slant pass, and the lanky All-American stretched every muscle to beat the Pittsburgh defenders to the goal line. At about the four, a tackler leapt at McInally-- McInally still doesn't know who it was, although he has seen the vide tape replay--and made...

Author: By Scott A. Kaufer, | Title: McInally, Bengal in Limbo, Quietly Returns to Harvard | 10/27/1975 | See Source »

Among them were Patty's lover, Steve Soliah, and his sisters Kathleen and Josephine. All three had been active and apparently nonviolent leftists. In 1974 Kathleen addressed a rally of radicals in Berkeley that was attended by Sara Moore. But the Soliahs have turned out to be members of the violent underground, and now the FBI is hunting Kathleen, who was accompanied in flight by Josephine, for questioning about Patty. Asks a bewildered police official: "How do you know when someone like them has gone over the edge from being merely a radical dissident to being an urban guerrilla...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RADICALS: CALIFORNIA'S UNDERGROUND | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

Probably an offshoot of the New World Liberation Front, with a membership of unknown size, the "army" has claimed "credit" for three bombings since March of this year, including that of a building in Berkeley that houses FBI offices...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RADICALS: CALIFORNIA'S UNDERGROUND | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...determine if Patty is capable of testifying, Judge Carter appointed four experts to examine the celebrated prisoner: Psychiatrists Seymour Pollack of the University of Southern California, Donald T. Lund of Stanford University, Louis J. West of U.C.L.A., and Psychologist Margaret Thaler Singer of the University of California at Berkeley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE HEARST CASE: WHICH PATTY TO BELIEVE? | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...true, as Smith implies, that the student protests of the sixties grew out of the often-unconscious recognition of their declining position. The intensity of protest at the most elite colleges--Columbia, Harvard, Berkeley, Brandeis--arose from the especially high expectations and disillusionment among students at such schools. In America and Western Europe, students have always been prospective independent professionals: doctors, lawyers, professors, and engineers. All that ended with the consolidation of bureaucratic capitalism. Smith's analysis is shallow in predicting future revolutionary class consciousness among educated workers--his mistake stems, again, from his too-mechanistic Marxism...

Author: By Jim Kaplan, | Title: Who Rules the Universities? | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

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