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...University. "When you have such a ridiculous minority without access to the corridors of power and not involved with hiring and firing, you are constrained in your choice of tactics. If there were Black people in power, these issues would not have to be resolved in the public domain...

Author: By Jonathan S. Sapers, | Title: Prodding the system from within | 6/7/1984 | See Source »

...Stanley, whose current domain is the number two spot on the Harvard men's varsity team, explains his success quite easily. "Everything I do, I have to do well," says Stanley, who achieved the world ranking at the end of last year...

Author: By Kristin A. Goss, | Title: BILL STANLEY | 5/11/1984 | See Source »

...first book was in the domain of physical imagination, concerning memories which are deeply engraved," Haviaras says. The events in this book belong purely to the author's creative imagination, but according to him, they are based on actual events...

Author: By Art Z. Schwaartz, | Title: It's A Wonderful Life | 5/4/1984 | See Source »

...city fought back. The next day a circuit court judge issued a restraining order which temporarily prevented the Colts from completing their move or playing anywhere else but in Baltimore--the first step in the effort to recapture the team under the legal doctrine of eminent domain. But locking the barn door did little good, the colt was gone and legal precedent favored Irsay. In the past year a California federal court has twice ruled in favor of Al Davis, owner of the Raiders, who challenged the NFL constitution and the city of Oakland when he moved his team from...

Author: By Theodore P. Friend, | Title: Anytown, U.S.A. | 4/19/1984 | See Source »

Novelist Yuz Aleshkovsky, 54, views all forbidden topics as the domain of farce. The comic artist had to support himself in the Soviet Union writing children's books. Now he has returned to adult fiction with gusto. His raunchiest work, Nikolai Nikolayevich, is a Russian Portnoy's Complaint. In Aleshkovsky's book, as in Philip Roth's novel, the hero spends most of his time masturbating. The Russian, however, finds an ingenious way to turn his obsession into a cushy government job when a Soviet laboratory purchases his prodigious production of spermatozoa for the greater glory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Soviet Literature Goes West | 3/12/1984 | See Source »

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