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GARBO TALKED! The death of the legendary film actress will bring to life a secret biography, based on rare interviews, that spent the past 14 years locked in a vault. Next month Simon & Schuster will publish Garbo, by the author Antoni Gronowicz, a longtime friend, who died five years ago. Withheld while Garbo was alive, it contains reminiscences about her childhood in Sweden and her relationships with mentor Mauritz Stiller, conductor Leopold Stokowski and others. In it, Garbo reflects on the tales that "women chased her more often and more persistently" than men. Another associate, film scholar Raymond Daum...
...have tried to publish guide-lines about not throwing things, the use of alcohol and fighting, but the guidelines haven't worked," he said...
...tutelage, Hartman developed the respect for religious tolerance that infuses his beliefs, and came to appreciate the American pluralistic experience as expressed in the writings of William James and John Dewey. After Fordham, Hartman doubled as a Montreal rabbi and a McGill University philosophy instructor. He didn't publish until he was 41 (he is now 58). "All that time I was just thinking," says Hartman -- which was just as well. His books and monographs are models of clarity. He writes "like Jacob wrestling with the angel," says the philosopher Michael Walzer. "He holds that experience no less than tradition...
AALARM might well be called an "alliance" rather than an "association" because, in many ways, we will function as an alliance of members from all groups--from across a wide religious and political spectrum. We will poster, meet and publish. We will express ourselves. And we will know that the deafening silence of Harvard's traditionalists will have been broken. E. Adam Webb '93 Kenneth D. DeGiorgio '93 Founders, AALARM
...named to a commission of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences to assess the dam's impact. One area at risk: the Danube Bend, a graceful curve of the river near the historic residence of Hungarian kings. Though the government banned public debate on the project, Vargha persisted. He helped publish a newsletter about the dam and circulated a petition against it that drew 10,000 signatures -- an action that, at the time, was the largest public protest in Eastern Europe since 1981. Vargha was harassed by the secret police, censured for "green anarchism" and fired from...