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Four days after Kerouac's death, Allen Ginsberg, just back from the funeral in Lowell, Massachusetts (Kerouac's hometown), spoke at a "National Teach-In on World Government," held at his and Jack's old school, Columbia. The "Teach-In" featured, among others, Herman Kahn, David Dellinger, and Allard Lowenstein. Ginsberg, in the Beat tradition of ignoring the world other people are talking about for his own vision of it, sang some very long Buddhist chants to the assembly, read from Kerouac's Mexico City Blues, and then from an elegiac poem on his friend's death, one that...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Books Scenes Along the Road | 2/1/1971 | See Source »

Among other losers in state campaigns were Basil Paterson, Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor, Adam Walinsky, Democratic candidate for Attorney General, and Allard K. Lowenstein, seeeking a second term in Congress...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Buckley Takes N.Y. Senate Seat; Goldberg, Lowenstein Lose Races | 11/4/1970 | See Source »

Republican Governor Nelson Rockefeller, who gave Goodell little support during the campaign, won handily over former Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg-and "Dump Johnson" architect, Rep. Allard Lowenstein, lost in a district that has been redrawn since his election two years...

Author: By Frank Rich and Thomas P. Southwick, S | Title: Nixon Achieves Slim Senate Gain With Upset Victories in the East | 11/4/1970 | See Source »

...movement for student involvement within the system has not been a total failure, however, and while there is no precise way of measuring its impact, there will be some. It will be felt unevenly, as students flock to prominent liberal candidates like Senator Charles Goodell and Representative Allard Lowenstein in New York and Senatorial Candidate Adlai Stevenson III in Illinois. Despite the drop in unrealistic enthusiasm, there seems little doubt that more students will be involved in party politics than ever before. At Cornell University, for instance, Government Professor Peter Sharfman says that without the recess perhaps 50 students would...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Politics: The Year of the Cop-Out | 11/2/1970 | See Source »

...pollution. If present trends to use the Mediterranean as the ultimate receptacle of noxious waste continue, Arvid Pardo said, its fishing industry will disappear in a few years. Swedish Ecologist Bengt Lundholm reported that only 14% of Italy's seacoast is now free of pollution. Dr. Jerold M. Lowenstein, a physician specializing in nuclear medicine, warned that radioactive wastes from an ever increasing number of nuclear power plants might endanger all life in and around the oceans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Pacem in Maribus | 7/20/1970 | See Source »

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