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...Anthony Mullaney, a Catholic radical and member of the "Milwaukee 14," Marcos Munoz of the United Farm Workers' Organizing Committee, Doug Hofstadter, a member of the National Student Association delegation which traveled to North and South Vietnam last winter to negotiate the People's Peace Treaty, Louise Bruyn, a Newton woman who recently walked to Washington from Boston to dramatize her protest against the war, and Arthur Johnson, a former Navy Lieutenant and member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW...

Author: By Garrett Epps, | Title: Antiwar Groups to Stage Protests Here | 5/5/1971 | See Source »

Radcliffe could only manage a fourth in the competition for the Jerry Reed Trophy, which determines the three New England representatives in the Nationals. The Crimson was 39 points behind first-place M.I.T. B.U. and Newton College also finished ahead of Radcliffe...

Author: By Bradford B. Kopp, | Title: Cliffe Sailing Team Misses Nationals; Harvard Fares Poorly in Tufts Regatta | 5/4/1971 | See Source »

M.I.T. and the Crimson should dominate tomorrow's regatta with B.U. and Jackson a distant third. Salem State and Newton College each have one standout skipper, but no Division "B" boat good enough to complement the Division "A" entry...

Author: By Bradford B. Kopp, | Title: 'Cliffe Sailors Enter Eliminations Almost Certain to Gain a Berth | 4/30/1971 | See Source »

...Three registers have been feeding steadily on queues of 25 patrons each, with easily as many customers milling eagerly around the record bins, since the start of the sale. "It's been like Saturday every day," commented one sales assistant. "We've had people in from Wellesley and Newton all week...

Author: By Martin H. Kaplan, | Title: Price War at Coop | 4/24/1971 | See Source »

That temptation?to be "like God"?is at the root of the ethical dilemmas posed by molecular biology. In one sense, the new findings have continued the work of Newton, Darwin and Freud, reducing men to even tinier cogs in a mechanistic universe. At the same time, it was man himself who deciphered the code of life and who can now, in Teilhard de Chardin's phrase, "seize the tiller of the world." If he is only a bundle of DNA-directed cells, more sophisticated but hardly dissimilar from those of animals and plants, he can at least...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Section: THE SPIRIT: Who Will Make the Choices of Life and Death? | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

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