Word: oxford
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...national movement, the Wobblies lasted barely 50 years, but they made it a lively half-century. Their story is sufficiently rich and vivid to survive even the unfortunate cast of academic language employed by the author, a British scholar and an editor of the Oxford Times. To some extent, the Wobblies were the progenitors of today's New Left. They shared the same detestation of contemporary society and the same desire to build a better world...
...University is establishing a temporary parking lot at the corner of Oxford St. and Hammond St. to handle the Law School problem...
...Mississippi, evidence does not always equal conviction, especially in civil rights cases. Still, acquittal seemed unlikely last week for eight white men on trial in U.S. District Judge Claude Clayton's court in Oxford. The cause of it all was a wild white mob that undeniably tried to halt school integration in Grenada last fall by flailing Negro schoolchildren with fists, feet, clubs and chains. According to the U.S. prosecutor, the defendants, including a justice of the peace, were part of that mob -and he had 25 witnesses to prove...
HENRY -- Daniel L. Freudenberger of Rochester, N.Y. (Oxford Dramatic Society): Ronald L. Trosper of Milwaukee, Wis. (Cambridge): and Ingrid J. Lorch of New York (Cambridge...
KNOX -- Robert H. Abzug of Great Neck, N.Y. (South Africa); Jonathan Boorstin (Cambridge); Stephen L. Griffith of Washington. D.C. (Oxford); Nicholas R. Jones of Gates Mills, Ohio (University of London); D. Gordon Mosser Jr. of Minneapolis, Minn. (Oxford); Philip D. Ray of Raleigh, N.C. (University of London); Christopher St. John of Weston (London School of African and Oriental Studies); and Steven Varga-Golovesenko of Huntington Station, N.Y. (University of London...