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...most cases, the specialized courses are taught by the professionals themselves. A physician gives the course in health services. A printer teaches printing, a jeweler gem cutting, an art historian a course in art history. And all of the professionals volunteer their services. As a result, the school's catalogue bulges with some 250 offerings. Philadelphias downtown area has literally become the school's campus, with students making their way from class to class by bus, subway or on foot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Parkway Experiment | 3/23/1970 | See Source »

People's Democracy, a student civil rights group, was formed at the University of Belfast immediately after the march. McCann smilingly explains that the printer didn't know what to put on the top of the poster for the group's first meeting. He started with "Students for Democracy," changed it to "People for Democracy." because there were more than students in the movement, and finally changed it to "People's Democracy" when he realized that "People for Democracy" didn't make much sense. "There were a lot of starry-eyed, romantic people in it," McCann said...

Author: By Richard E. Hyland, | Title: Slouching Towards Bethlehem | 3/9/1970 | See Source »

...chord in America. Agnew is "really a booming stock right now," says an aide. Tickets for upcoming Agnew appearances in Atlanta are selling out fast, and he is booked into Florida and Mississippi. A Florida dealer has sold 30,000 "God Bless Spiro Agnew" posters. In California one enterprising printer is marketing 50,000 "I Like Spiro" bumper stickers. Others cropping up on America's bumpers include "Sock It to 'Em, Spiro," "Spiro Of '76" and "Agnew Tells It Like It Is!" In Pennsylvania, Spirophiles have started SAFARI, "Spiro Agnew Fans and Rooters Inc." Republicans around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Vice Presidency: Spiro of '76? | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

...potential saving is much greater than the printer's bill for that section of "Rules." We have an elaborate administrative machinery which exists, principally to enforce concentration rules. It involves enormous amounts of paper work and man-hours-on the part of head tutors, departmental secretaries, and the registrar's office. If we could only drop the whole procedure of composing, advising about, and enforcing concentration rules, these efforts could be much better expended elsewhere. Not to mention the time the rules cost the student...

Author: By Philip Stewart, | Title: Harvard Without Concentrations? | 1/6/1970 | See Source »

...others, the losses are all too genuine. A Portland, Ore., printer borrowed heavily to buy a new issue of a computer manufacturer at 5. When the stock dropped to 21, his loan was called, forcing him to sell. Altogether, he lost about half of his $2,000 investment. Sylvan Fry, 53, a manufacturer's agent, began investing for the first time last winter, buying oil, chemical and computer issues. On paper he has already lost $6,500 of the $11,400 that he started with. George Ratliff Jr., 39, a Pittsburgh steel-company engineer, began 1969 with a portfolio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Victims of the Fall | 8/8/1969 | See Source »

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