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According to Thomas E. Crooks, director of the summer school, increase of 333 students is due to a much larger number students from colleges other than Harvard. There were 3311 students from other colleges this year as opposed to only 3021 last summer. Crooks explained that the number of high-school students had remained constant...

Author: By Maxine S. Paisner, | Title: Summer School's Expansion Threatens Classroom Space | 8/9/1965 | See Source »

...Lynda roughed it with a team from the University of Arizona excavating near a place called Grasshopper. And while she was rolling that wheelbarrow around, guess what Sister Luci Baines was doing for wheels back in Washington: varooming through town in a new 350-h.p. Corvette Sting Ray, a high-school graduation birthday present (she turns 18 July 2) from her parents. "How do you like your new car?" asked an imaginative newsman as she sat revving the engine. Cooed Luci: "How would you like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jul. 2, 1965 | 7/2/1965 | See Source »

...genius of the first issue of Negro Affairs is that it has no ideology. The introduction announces that the magazine is purposely reflective and diverse: there are articles by a Radcliffe graduate now teaching junior high-school, a Harvard lecturer, a Harvard SNCC worker, and a Yale drop...

Author: By Michael Lerner, | Title: A Refreshing Radicalism | 5/28/1965 | See Source »

...campus, where it once was squaresville to flip for the rock scene, it now is the wiggiest of kicks. Brenda Lee, 20, a tot-sized (4 ft. 11 in., plus five inches of hair) rockette who developed her belting delivery as a high-school cheerleader, outranks Folk Singer Joan Baez and jazz's Ella Fitzgerald on the college popularity polls. "Rock really turns everybody on," says one Princeton senior...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rock 'n' Roll: The Sound of the Sixties | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

...birth to the newly independent University of Victoria in the province's garden-filled capital. In Burnaby, near Vancouver, the innovating Simon Fraser University will open next fall on a $15 million, 1,168-acre campus-just 18 months after the architects were commissioned. It will accept bright high-school juniors and seniors at ages as low as 15, teach by TV, give degrees in less than three years on a trimester plan. Junior-college systems similar to those of California and Florida are getting started in British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Universities: A Flowering Up North | 4/23/1965 | See Source »

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