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Shaw added that only with financial support from public organizations like the ACGB and its American counterpart, the National Endowment for the Arts, (NEA) can art "be made effective outside the clique of the learned and the wealthy...

Author: By Daniel J. Jones, | Title: Shaw on the Arts | 12/1/1981 | See Source »

With 59,000 seats at the Yale Bowl open to Elis, and only 14,000 open to Harvard fans, a scalper in Cambridge has an advantage over his counterpart in New Haven...

Author: By Daniel J. Jones, | Title: Harvard Goes Bulldog Hunting | 11/21/1981 | See Source »

...success of short screens to 1979 Game star Jim Callinan. Though Harvard boasts a pair of strong tight ends--Linus O'Donnell and Bill McGlone--they have accounted for only five receptions all year. Perhaps Harvard coach Joe Restic is saving them as a special surprise for his Yalie counterpart Carm Cozza. Speedy Paul Scheper, the senior wide receiver, has caught only nine passes thus...

Author: By Laurence S. Grafstein, | Title: The Season Begins and Ends On Saturday | 11/19/1981 | See Source »

...believe that this is still true, mainly because of the close bonds between the two groups and the Poles' strong feeling of national unity. The army's 210,000 members are drawn largely from the same worker and peasant ranks as members of Solidarity and its rural counterpart; so are 86% of the Polish officer corps. Conscripts tend to serve in the regions where they are drafted, adding further to their identification with local people. Says one Western diplomat in Warsaw: "An army like that is designed to defend the country and not to put down revolts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Popular Army | 11/9/1981 | See Source »

...colonies. "The surrender at Yorktown," Reagan told the crowd of 60,000 (one of whom presented him with a reproduction of a Revolutionary sword), "was a victory for the right of self-determination. It was and is the affirmation that freedom will eventually triumph over tyranny." His Socialist French counterpart, however, had a more pointedly contemporary interpretation of the celebration. Said Mitterrand: "The aspirations of the peoples of the world today are as legitimate as those of our forefathers. Let us act so that their message is heard before it is too late...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Last Bicentennial Bash | 11/2/1981 | See Source »

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