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They should certainly avoid Richard Zorza's The Right To Say We: The Adventures of a Young Englishman at Harvard and in the Youth Movement (New York: Praeger, paper $2.25). Whatever things Zorza's book may have going for it, facts are not among them. Culminating all the sloppy inaccuracies, the book is dedicated (inexplicably) to the city manager of Cambridge, whose first name Zerza gets wrong. Although the most smoothly written of the three strike books. Zorza's book alternates from wallowing in romanticism about Youth and Togetherness to trampling through the most incredibly arcane details of moderate student...

Author: By Michael E. Kinsley, | Title: From the Coop Those Harvard Books | 6/11/1970 | See Source »

...Called Horse is actually Lord Morgan, an aristocratic Englishman in search of big game in the forests of the New World, circa 1825. According to the laws of adventure fiction, a highborn Briton who wanders into the wilderness must undergo total metamorphosis before he can be let out. Lord Greystoke's scion, for instance, went into Africa as a cherubic infant and emerged as Tarzan of the Apes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Home of the Braves | 5/11/1970 | See Source »

Morgan (Richard Harris) enters America as a white hunter and emerges as an Indian chief. His small hunting party is annihilated by Sioux who decide to keep the Englishman as a plaything. They dub him Horse, tether his neck and make him clop about on all fours. Just before his spirit splinters, Horse is beguiled by an Indian maiden named Running Deer (Corinna Tsopei). The only way to bed her is to wed her, he reasons, and to do that he must earn a place in the home of the braves. To prove his prowess, Morgan takes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Home of the Braves | 5/11/1970 | See Source »

...Hague. They boast that they have never had to vote on a decision. Jan Brouwer, the chairman, is a tall, heavily built Dutchman with a taste for modern art, and the vice chairman is David Barran, whose monocle and Savile Row tailoring make him seem the archetypal upper-class Englishman. Most of the managing directors are bilingual, and some speak three or four languages. The only American, Monroe ("Monty") Spaght, who is also chairman of the U.S.'s Shell Oil Co., notes: "When some companies call themselves multinational, I say the hell with it. They haven't finished...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Oil: Growth Despite Shortage | 5/4/1970 | See Source »

Then Young, pewter mug in hand, proposed a toast to "a fine old building" and to the Mass Hall ghost, an omnipresent resident of the dorm. The ghost was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and since no one knows which side he was on. Mike Meddler '73, an Englishman, honored the ghost with a toast to "freedom" and Sam Burr '73, a Yankee, gave a toast to "independence...

Author: By Jonathan P. Carlson, | Title: Ghost Joins Mass Hall Celebration | 4/24/1970 | See Source »

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