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Their break from Buckley scattered them, for these were extreme individualists with no convenient enemy like communism to buckle them into a cohesive group. A few, like the Chicago community at the New Individualist Review or the Colorado congregation at Rampart College focused on attacking Buckley as a detractor of real capitalism, the energies of these groups went toward purifying the New Right by reorienting its faith from anti-communism into pro-free enterprise. Two years ago Rampart College pulled up roots and moved to Santa Ana, near the heart of Southern California's infamous Orange County. Since that time...

Author: By Lowell Ponte, | Title: Right On In California | 1/7/1970 | See Source »

...time. One project among some long-time Libertarians is to induce young would-be conservatives to use marijuana; "once they turn on," one explained, "they can never support a dictator again, even if his name is Buckley." Another project is education, a reason that Rampart College sponsors class and home study courses on free enterprise, and that a dozen large newsletters and magazines now circulate Libertarian ideas. The Bucklcyites in Y. A. F., called the "trads," have reacted to this influence since the last National Convention, where a Libertarian caucus gained the support of more than 40 per cent...

Author: By Lowell Ponte, | Title: Right On In California | 1/7/1970 | See Source »

...Three. More screams. Then the stampede stopped and people were beginning to gather around the wounded woman again. No one else had been hit. From the gestures of the people around the scene, I supposed that the gunman had run down a side street that angled off of Rampart...

Author: By Thomas A. Sancton, | Title: New Orleans Jazz Funeral Pounds Gaily for the Dead | 5/20/1969 | See Source »

...becomes a systematic, if not willful, deference to modernity in choice of theme, form and language. In the worst it appears as the author's profound unwillingness to make himself responsible for his work. These failings, moreover, seem to be endemic to the Advocate. An issue of the Lion Rampart, also published this week, was bolder on every level...

Author: By Charles F. Sabel, | Title: The Advocate | 4/13/1968 | See Source »

...motorcade swung on down South Rampart Street, and Louis Armstrong, 65, felt like doing a little swinging himself. "These are my old stomping grounds," graveled Satchmo. "Everybody was blowin' good stuff here when I was a kid." Louis came back to his home town on Louis Armstrong Day to play a benefit concert for the New Orleans Jazz Museum. "I used to stand on the corners and play until the cops came along and ran us away," recalled' Louis, fingering the cornet he first learned to toot 52 years ago at the old Waifs Home. Then he grinned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Nov. 12, 1965 | 11/12/1965 | See Source »

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