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Playwright Peterson has captured Spencer's seventeen-ness admirably, and High-School Senior Louis Gossett plays him well. There is a fresh, humorous smack to the writing-that sense of proportion so vital in dealing with a character who lacks one. But only his humor and his hero are Playwright Peterson's own; they function inside a framework, indeed a virtual cage of cliches. Where Spencer is typical but real, his experiences are merely trite, and sometimes clumsy and protracted. What makes Take a Giant Step uncommon in terms of Negro life-its middle-class outlook-is precisely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: New Shows in Manhattan, Oct. 5, 1953 | 10/5/1953 | See Source »

There were soft spots in the economy, too, and some of them seemed to offer a measure of support for the recession talk that was loose in the land. With farm income down, the farm-machinery busi ness slumped. The petroleum industry showed signs of overproduction; Sin clair Refining Co. and Phillips Petroleum Co. cut their crude-oil refinery runs 3 to 5% for September. Auto production fell moderately during August as auto makers began to feel the Hydra-Matic transmission pinch and output of 1953 models started to taper off in preparation for retooling for 1954. There was softness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STATE OF BUSINESS: Sound & Busy | 9/14/1953 | See Source »

...second factor in favor of the Busi- ness School squad is practice. The R-School has an active intra-mural program which enables its stars to keep in some thing resembling condition. The Law School has less time for sports...

Author: By Andrew E. Norman ., | Title: Law, Business School Fives Play All-Star Game Today | 3/17/1953 | See Source »

...Parts Grease. Last week in his "Strictly Personal" column, syndicated in 16 papers around the U.S., Harris walloped writers of swashbuckling historical novels; rose to the defense of unstuffy clergymen ("Dull[ness] and pompous[ness] . . . has nothing to recommend it, neither piety nor good sense"); punctured the idea that Europeans are more "romantic" than Americans; criticized a congressional investigation of obscene books ("There is not, and has never been, any real evidence that literature, even of the lowest order, has ever 'corrupted' morals") ; and tossed off a few of his typically irreverent "Purely Personal Prejudices" ("Whenever I meet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Second-String Aristotle | 2/9/1953 | See Source »

Guest speakers are the real core of the Bull and Bear organization. Every other Friday the members gather in Hark-ness Commons to eat lunch, listen to, and question leaders in business and finance on aspects of investments. "We are not limited to the Stock Exchange, but it is a basic and interesting place from which to begin." Weinberger explains. Next year the club plans to branch out into the problems of plant management...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Law Students Plot Out Market's Fluctuations | 1/17/1953 | See Source »

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