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Radcliffe President Linda S. Wilson spoke to a crowd of around 50 female undergraduates and fielded questions with vice president Barbara J. Nelson in the Lyman Common Room on Thursday evening...

Author: By Justin D. Lerer, | Title: Radcliffe President Speaks on Restructuring | 12/9/1995 | See Source »

...President described the entire academic plan of the College," Nelson said...

Author: By Justin D. Lerer, | Title: Radcliffe President Speaks on Restructuring | 12/9/1995 | See Source »

...postscript, perhaps it would be educational to remind readers that Thomas Jefferson, Nelson Mandela and Alexander Solzhenitsyn were men who exploited the forum of free speech to attack the "core values" of there states. Ben Shacher's vision would have all these men arrested under charges of edition, as men whose opinions for "outside the permitted parameters" Ben-Shachar provides no answer on how a government can safely distinguish between Nelson Mandela and Timothy McVeigh, both of whom called for the collapse of the state. Devin McLachlan...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Threat Is Not Speech | 12/1/1995 | See Source »

...charged with setting up the hit-squad responsible for killings during the apartheid struggle. At the same time, former African National Congress leaders Thabo Mbeki and Joe Modise have been granted temporary immunity while a "Truth Commission," headed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, investigates. South African right-wingers have accused Nelson Mandela of using the affair to dole out political retribution, a charge the South African President denies. Deputy President F.W. De Klerk has said if Malan is prosecuted, Modise should lose his immunity and be tried for ordering ANC guerrillas to commit 'deeds of terrorism.' As for Malan, Hawthorne says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LAYING BLAME FOR APARTHEID ATROCITIES | 11/30/1995 | See Source »

South African President Nelson Mandela named fellow Nobel Peace Prize winner Desmond Tutu to head a commission that will investigate political crimes committed under apartheid. "Tutu is a very good choice for the post," reports TIME's Peter Hawthorne from Cape Town. "He has shown himself to be on the side of truth, and shouldn't hold any longstanding bitterness during the hearings the commission will hold. He's also not afraid of controversy, even if that includes going against Mandela himself. For example, Tutu was critical of Mandela's handling of the situation in Nigeria, when the playwright...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE TUTU COMMISSION | 11/29/1995 | See Source »

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