Word: kozol
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...virtually nothing in it. There are two selections from an unpublished novel by an Advocate Pegasus three years graduated; two poems by William Alfred, whose connection with the magazine is equally tenuous; a free ad for the HDC's 100th production by Steve Aaron; a poem by Junior Jonathan Kozol, and a somewhat unusual biographical reverie by President John Ratte...
Besides these three stories the rest of the issue doesn't seem to matter so much. I think the best thing to say about Jonathan Kozol's little piece of satanism is that he has given his people wonderful names: Brubeck, Euclid, Castrato. The poetry in the issue is almost uniformly hard to remember. In the best of the lot, Epitaph for a Young Athlete, F. L. Seidel clothes his single small joke in pretentious language. While the only image of David Ferry's The Late Hour Poem is more ludicrous than striking, Nina Castelli's The Coquette concludes, with...
...Kozol, chairman of the Committee, charged that "We have been rendered ineffectual." He went on to say that the dental student was of draft age when World War II broke out and yet never served a day of military service...
...Kozol also said "the attention of dentists all over the United States has been drawn to this action which involves influence peddling from high governmental positions...
...other elections, James R. Sikes '57 was named Vice-president and John U. Burdick '57, Jared U. Diamond '58, James L. Kincaid '58, John Kozol '58, and Richard H. Murray '58 were selected as officers at large for the council...