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...matter how legitimate their aims, the splinter groups can only add up to a headache for those trying to reunify the Republican Party. National Chairman Ray Bliss recently ordered his finance committee to withhold its contributor lists from splinter organizations. Then, after the Goldwater announcement, Bliss angrily spoke out on the touchy subject. "When you have side movements," he said, "they certainly aren't helpful. I believe we should be presenting a united front...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Republicans: The Splinters | 6/25/1965 | See Source »

...Carrie was republished and acclaimed "a work of genius." Iconoclast Dreiser lapsed into respectability. He took over as top editor of Butterick's magazines (feminine fashions), snagged H. L. Mencken as a contributor, wrote perfervidly moral editorials -and lost his job when he tried to seduce the daughter of an assistant editor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Genius of the Ordinary | 5/7/1965 | See Source »

...G.O.P. party worker so peculiarly out of line with his leaders? The answer is suggested in Rovere's sketch of Goldwater's career. In 1952 Goldwater was only a few years removed from the party worker level (big contributor variety); he was a conservative Eisenhower Republican. But somewhere between 1952 and 1956, as Rovere puts it, the conservative and his conscience met. Goldwater got ideology. He repudiated the Eisenhower Administration, the essence (and justification) of expediential Republicanism...

Author: By Michael D. Barone, | Title: Two Retrospective Road Maps to San Francisco | 4/21/1965 | See Source »

...only trouble with this diverse collection of authorities on "The American City," is that one wonders what they're all doing in The Harvard Review. With only one contributor from Harvard and no articles by undergraduates or grad students (a departure from previous issues), it looks like the Review has decided to find its talent outside the University. More likely, such inconsistencies, as well as the changes in format (the issue is much handsomer under its new printer), are a result of its youth, and can be expected to right themselves with maturity...

Author: By Mary L. Wissler, | Title: The Harvard Review | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

Almost every contributor to this book has his own optimistic theory about LSD's application. The book contains more answers than questions. Reading it one gets the disturbing picture of a lot of children playing with fire: Timothy Leary proposing psychedelic colonies, one researcher giving LSD to psychotics, another giving it to people approaching death. Psychologists play with philosophy and novelists toy with psychology...

Author: By William H. Smock, | Title: The LSD Game | 1/12/1965 | See Source »

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