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...litigating important civil rights suits. The New York Times rushed to the defense of academic freedom which it perceived as under attack, editorializing: "Surely Harvard law students should be able to make up their own minds about a teacher on the basis of what he teaches." Black syndicated columnist Carl T. Rowan concluded of the episode. "Now we have black students in the exalted climes of Harvard declaring all whites guilty of something--because they are white." Harvard Government professor Martin Kilson, also Black, wrote a piece for the Washington Post in which he blasted the "Ethnic Arrogance...

Author: By Adam S. Cohen, | Title: Law School Dispute | 9/13/1982 | See Source »

...York Times's food columnist confesses and celebrates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Memoirs of a Happy Man | 9/13/1982 | See Source »

...sent a couple of psychiatrists to size him up and then a platoon of police to take him away for further tests. When social workers offered him lodging in one of the city's shelters for the homeless, Cruz sniffed: "The shelters are pigpens." Said one local newspaper columnist: "He must have been one of the sanest men in the city of New York to refuse to live in those places." But at week's end Cruz had been relocated to a room in Bellevue Hospital's psychiatric ward to await legal proceedings about his fate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americana: Living Rent-Free on Manhattan's Upper East Side | 9/6/1982 | See Source »

...Cousins disagreed with that strategy and walked out. By 1973 the fragmented SR was in bankruptcy and Cousins strode back in. He restored the old formula but not the old form. In 1977 a new investor group took over, and in 1978 Cousins reduced his role to that of columnist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: A Cultured Voice Falls Silent: THE SATURDAY REVIEW | 8/30/1982 | See Source »

...advertising front with a poll of "worldclass sailors" that claimed to show overwhelming preference for its shoe. Crowed the headline: 151 WORLD-CLASS SAILORS PROVE SPERRY TOPSIDER IS LOSING ITS GRIP. Meanwhile, Timberland is happily handing out reprints of a Playboy "Fashion Guide" interview in which Conservative Columnist William F. Buckley Jr., a transatlantic sailor who always tries to put his right foot forward, calls Timberland's product "the world's most comfortable shoe." To prove that Timberland's popularity cuts across political lines, the accompanying letter notes that "Senator Kennedy recently requested a pair of Timberland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: No-Skid Scuffle | 8/23/1982 | See Source »

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