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...week's end the dealers were beginning to act a little sheepish about the whole affair. One of their colleagues, Chevrolet Dealer Lyman Slack, called the boycott "as poor a display of business judgment as I've seen in many a year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Car Dealers' Protest | 11/1/1971 | See Source »

...Spray. District officials did not need to be asked twice. After buying 7,000 acres, they set up a small test project. "It was amazing," says Bart T. Lyman, chief of maintenance and operations. "Corn planted on three acres of land treated with sludge grew eight feet tall. By comparison, the stalks on two acres of untreated land were stunted, only three feet high...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: The Value of Sludge | 9/27/1971 | See Source »

...School's Student-Faculty Committee on Discipline will hear at 10 a.m. tomorrow the case of John B. McKean, a first-year graduate student who has been accused of helping disrupt the "Counter Teach-In." The hearing, which is open to the public, will take place in the Eliot-Lyman Room of Longfellow Hall...

Author: By Jeff Magalif, | Title: 'Teach-In' Disruption Hearings End; CRR to Announce Verdicts Soon | 5/19/1971 | See Source »

...next day, the Daily published an editorial calling the raid a "fishing expedition" and charging that it was designed to have a "chilling effect on the media to exercise the rights guaranteed to them by the First Amendment." Stanford President Richard Lyman called the raid "deplorable and threatening to the full freedom of the press...

Author: By Garrett Epps, | Title: Stanford 'Daily' Sues Police | 5/14/1971 | See Source »

...weeks ago, a plastic bomb exploded near Stanford President Richard Lyman's office, causing an estimated $25,000 worth of damage. So far, local police, the university's campus cops and the FBI have not made a single arrest. To Lyman, the incidents were a relic of the past rather than a harbinger of the future. "Terrorism," he said, "tends to be the tactic of a protest movement that has no mass following." The Stanford Daily seemed to agree. Though past editorials have occasionally taken radical stands, the paper condemned the new violence: "It is chilling to realize...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Tame Spring, Troubled Stanford | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

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