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Marcia also finds time to be one of the most active women in the community, teaching Sunday school, playing the church organ, working for the P.T.A. She conducts intense sessions with her high-school-level church classes on the war (which she hates) and abortion on demand (which she decidedly favors). She is deeply proud of the life she has carved for herself out of the rich Midwestern soil. "I'm still not sorry I don't have a college education," she says. "Being married and having a family were the most important things...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: A GALLERY OF AMERICAN WOMEN | 3/20/1972 | See Source »

Gregg Allman's vocals are strong throughout the album, but his organ solos more often detract then add to the instrumental jams...

Author: By Roger L. Smith, | Title: Eat A Peach | 3/15/1972 | See Source »

...same Fillmore East concert series from which their third album was taken, the number fails to reach the near-perfection which characterized the long jams of the previous album. The beginning and end of the song are brilliant expositions of dual guitar work, but the intervening bass, drum, and organ solos cannot sustain the musical intensity of Allman and Betts's guitars...

Author: By Roger L. Smith, | Title: Eat A Peach | 3/15/1972 | See Source »

...matter. He writes about life force and the wonderful women whose imaginations he grapples with.. Miller fled America because of its gold standard of human exchange, the passionless cash nexus. He searched for relationships beyond the insane, mechanistic commonplace in which the obsession is only with the sexual organ of women...

Author: By Timothy Carlson, | Title: Henry Miller's Swansong | 3/11/1972 | See Source »

...philosophy of People Switchboard changed. No longer was the Switchboard a mere advisory organ. It had now become an organizational proponent of experimentation as well...

Author: By Robin Freedberg, | Title: Curriculum Reform? Or Is the Issue Dead? | 3/3/1972 | See Source »

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