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Ignoring Issues. The new Jewish press seems to have originated in the fall of 1966 in Manhattan, when Columbia Sophomore Alan Mintz and Yale Sophomore James Sleeper founded the quarterly Response. "We thought Jewish intellectuals were ignoring important Jewish issues," explains Mintz today. "But we also wanted to publish poetry, fiction, even satire." At first, Response took only undergraduate material. Now it welcomes contributions from Jews of all ages and the quality has improved markedly...
...After TIME obtained the Phelan manuscript, LIFE announced last week that it was canceling its plans to publish excerpts of the Irving book. McGraw-Hill, keeping its own counsel, still held out some apparent hope for the Irving version. It announced simply that Phelan had supplied "additional information7' on the book's possible origins...
...wrong to assert that the celebrated breach between Sartre and Camus arose from Sartre's presumed refusal to publish a report on Stalin's concentration camps. If Mr. Jago had bothered to consult the sources, he would have discovered that Sartre had in fact published in Les Temps Modernes in 1947--long before his break with Camus--a report revealing the existence and nature of forced labor camps in the Soviet Union. Thereafter, in editorials, articles and notes--also in Les Temps Modernes--he never ceased to take a stand against the camps. He was "horrified," "enraged," even "obsessed...
...merely regurgitating received ideas--of the novel Les Mandarins. In this novel, there is a dispute between two characters: Henri and Dubreuilh. It is in this novel, and within it alone, that the dispute between the characters centered on the question whether or not to publish a report on Stalin's labor camps. In viewing this novel as a roman a clef, there has been a temptation in certain quarters to identify Henri with Camus and Dubreuilh with Sartre. But as Simone de Beauvoir, the author of the novel, has clearly stated in her autobiography La Force des Choses: "Henri...
...professional journalistic obligation to check its information with the principals and others known to have been present." Though the group has neither legal standing nor machinery to enforce its decisions, it recommended that the Union Advocate print the remarks critical of itself. Said Spielman: "Of course I'll publish them. I had planned to all along...