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...reporters in Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro sought to trace his early years in South America. Correspondent Bernard Diederich visited known witchcraft centers in rural Mexico in search of Don Juan, and Sandra Burton herself traveled south of the border seeking the shaman. In New York, Reporter-Researcher Patricia Beckert interviewed Castaneda's friends and fellow anthropologists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Mar. 5, 1973 | 3/5/1973 | See Source »

...science and engineering remain M.I.T.'s basic educational pursuits, a growing number of its 4,000 undergraduates are opting for more than just the requisite 10% of their course credits in the humanities. Literature classes are swamped; creative writing courses have grown tenfold in five years. Says Poet Patricia Gumming of her students: "They make fascinating analogies to science. They have a way of rushing to the blackboard and covering it with equations: W equals world view, G equals God and so on. You can be teaching John Donne and end up with a board like a physics class...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: M.I.T.: Beyond Technology | 2/26/1973 | See Source »

...Joanna Blum (Mrs. Pedley), Patricia Shallcross (Lil), and Susie Fisher (Mrs. Beesley), don't get bogged down in the bathos of their roles. The implicit humor in their outlooks saves the play from becoming a light-weight tragedy. The three of them also avoid most of the pitfalls of an affected English accent. Susie Fisher becomes florid at points, but she never leaves her character as Mrs. Beesley...

Author: By Dwight Cramer, | Title: A Room with No View | 2/24/1973 | See Source »

During the 1960s, most white Mississippi liberals were united only by their silence. To be sure, there were some "festering sores of liberalism," as one orator noted: Hodding Carter and Hodding Carter III, Patricia Derian, Kenneth Dean, Hazel Brannon Smith, James Silver, to name a few. But most whites who opposed Mississippi's state of madness were silenced by their fear of social and economic pressure and the very real threat of violence at the hands of racist monomaniacs...

Author: By Edwin Willams, | Title: A Populist's Dream | 2/13/1973 | See Source »

...year to the Soviet Union in exchange for urea and ammonia that the company would sell in the U.S. That, Hammer predicts, would lead to a whole series of metal, gas and construction deals with the U.S.S.R. that could run into billions of dollars. He told TIME Correspondent Patricia Delaney that he expects to sign the Soviets to contracts for all these transactions this year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: Trying to Hammer a Deal | 1/29/1973 | See Source »

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