Word: marches
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Harper's gambles most of its March issue on the hope that readers will be fascinated by Norman Mailer's 90,000-word reflections on the follies of last fall's Washington Peace March. Mailer flails himself as much as he does other Mailerian targets-Nazis, cancer, L.B.J., newspapers, and TIME. Indeed, Mailer begins by fully quoting TIME'S Oct. 27 account of his performance on the stage of Washington's Ambassador Theater at a rally before the Pentagon march began. Drunk he was, and he admits it. But the crisp account of Mailer...
...American Nazi, and stares him down in the inevitable Mailerian confrontation of wills. "You Jew bastard," shouts the Nazi. "Kraut pig!" replies Norman, only a bit embarrassed. But for Mailer's reportorial eye and his caustic comments on an America overwhelmed by institutionalism, his version of the Pentagon march might have become far too personal. As it is, he reveals the diversity and ethical intricacy of the protest movement as no reporter has yet done...
After the play closes--sometime in March--Miss Hellman will give a public lecture...
Columbia and Princeton are moving relentlessly towards their March 2 Ivy League showdown at Princeton. Last weekend the Lions bombed Dartmouth Friday night and as we know beat Harvard Saturday...
Pusey's nomination must be ratified by the Overseers at their next meeting on March 11 before the appointment is official. The Overseers have rarely, if ever, refused a presidential appointment. If approved, Liller will take over as new Master in September, succeeding Rueben A. Brower, who will retire in June after 14 years as Master...