Word: goldman
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...science and medicine," the brochure says, with Professors Everett I. Mendelsohn, Barbara G. Rosenkrantz, and lectures by Leon Eisenberg, Jean Mayer, and Stephen Weinberg. The third session concentrated on the politics and history of Soviet Russia, with Adam B. Ulam, Edward L. Keenan, Donald L. Fanger, and Marshall I. Goldman. Each session drew between 75 and 100 people...
...Nesbit. White goes to his grave and Thaw to an insane asylum. But Doctorow has his own plans for Evelyn. Down from her red velvet swing, she drifts to the immigrant slums of New York's Lower East Side, where her social consciousness is raised by anarchist Emma Goldman. Sigmund Freud confronts the pleasure principle at Coney Island and cannot get back to Vienna fast enough...
...days it is not enough for performers to be gifted or versatile. As a new wave of show-biz biographies gloomily illustrates, stars must now be pumped up into symbols of their profession or indictments of their society. It was in just this spirit of distorted inflation that Albert Goldman last year took Lenny Bruce from shlepper to counterculture shaman in 13 uneasy chapters...
began with the widely publicized revelations about scandalous condi tions in nursing homes across the country. But Senior Editor Martin Goldman, who directed the project, felt that TIME'S story should "go beyond exposes of death camps for the elderly" and explore more broadly how older citizens are- and should be- helped in mid-1970s America. To that end, TIME correspondents not only visited nursing homes, good and bad, but toured other enclaves for the aged, from elegant "retirement villages" in Florida to the peeling stoops of Boston's South End. Public health officials and gerontologists were tapped...
...international fund-raising grows, in the far distance, Olney says, the University may see a vice president for international affairs. But both Peterson and Goldman believe that in the near future such an office won't be necessary. Peterson is even skeptical about how much money there is left out there for Harvard. And Goldman cites a "natural disinclination" of corporations to chip into something that might recommend that the workers should help out in management. But to the people in charge of the centers, institutions and departments that see the cutbacks coming--people like Fairbank--even the hope...