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...states that the cost of tutorial instruction "is justified by the special educational values which accrue from it in a college which is strongly opposed to the increasingly common mass-production methods of American higher education today.... Tutorial work ... has an active, participating, individual quality particularly important for the fullest development of each student's powers." Such a policy sounds very impressive to the entering freshman, but what is he to think when he discovers that it apparently applies only to an elite group...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TUTORIALS FOR ALL | 2/17/1962 | See Source »

Faculty opinion divided over the issue. "I have the fullest confidence that students wouldn't be corrupted by free access to all political opinions," declared a professor of political science who favored admitting Hall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University of Washington Officials Bar Campus Address by Gus Hall | 2/13/1962 | See Source »

What Is U.S. Education? The fullest description in years is Martin Mayer's The Schools (Harper; $4.95), a perceptive reporter's first-hand account of everything from team teaching to teacher training, plus live children in live classrooms. The year's most important single issue is summed up in James B. Conant's Slums and Suburbs (McGraw-Hill; $3.95), a sobering report on the growing gap between have and have-not schools, with special emphasis on the "social dynamite" building up in big-city Negro ghettos. Sociologist Patricia C. Sexton's Education and Income (Viking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: A TWELVE-BOOK CRAM COURSE | 1/5/1962 | See Source »

Just when I was beginning to feel that I was peculiar because I want to do something with my life besides bear children, along comes an article about a woman who has lived the fullest life imaginable that proves to me, and I hope to a lot of other girls in college, that all this is not in vain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Nov. 10, 1961 | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

...scorn in his voice, he suggested that if the big powers could not really get together on a successor to Dag Hammarskjold, the problem might be turned over to someone else-the Africans themselves. "We, the smaller states, will produce one," declared Wachuku, "and will give him our fullest support. That is how we do things in Africa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: United Nations: Pride of Africa | 10/20/1961 | See Source »

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