Word: fictionalizes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Some students took issue with the criteria employed in restricting access to a course. "I was turned down for 'The Women's Tradition in Fiction,' probably because I've never taken a literature course before," Suzanne L. Coates '81 said yesterday. "To limit the number of people is an elitist way to run a course. It's like everything else at this university. You have to be good already," she added...
Some professors take steps to alleviate overcrowding. Howard S. Hibbett '44, professor of Japanese Literature and instructor for Japanese 121b, "Modern Japanese Fiction," divided his course into two sections when too many students enrolled in his course...
...personae, but as profound sketches of imaginary people. It is impossible to refuse the invitation. Gilliatt's narrative line is sure, and her antic spirit is unflagging. What is fully drawn and wholly believable, curiously enough, is the great love between the two brothers. If the result is fiction as eccentric as its subjects, no matter. Most current novels err in the direction of stultifying detail and would be better if they were supplied with less meat and more bone...
...FICTION: A Perfect Vacuum, Stanislaw Lem ∙ Birdy. William Wharton Nostalgia for the Present, Andrei Voznesensky ∙ The Coup, John Updike ∙ The Flounder, Gunter Grass ∙ The Stories of John Cheever. John Cheever ∙ The World According to Garp, John Irving...
...FICTION...