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Word: rubins (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...schedule is so flat. Cavett himself has at times fumbled badly, by letting his guests run away with the show, by standing too much in awe of their prestige, or by being unprepared. He can also be a little less than sophisticated when he feels the spirit. Radical Jerry Rubin moved him to say "Politics bores the ass off me." He once cut off an LSD sales pitch from Timothy Leary with "You're full of crap...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Dick Cavett: The Art of Show and Tell | 6/7/1971 | See Source »

...liberal state. Gross repression seoms to elicit embarrassment from some courts, some corporate executives, and some of the media. And gross repression still elicits disbelief from revolutionaries who ought to know better. Repression like that in Washington seems to help the movement of the "children of America" in Jerry Rubin's phrase-the white middle-class left-in a way that neither actions nor ideology seem able to do. Yet gross repression against the Panthers embarrasses no one on top, and certainly does not help build the Panthers, whose support does derive from their own theory and practice, rather than...

Author: By David R. Ignatius, | Title: MAYDAY Between Moratorium and People's War | 5/14/1971 | See Source »

...forth it does so with an energy that approximates the frenzy of good, crazy fiction. "Groovy" Hutchinson, the drifter who was murdered alongside Linda Fitzptarick, comes on like a Ken Kesey hero, a con artist who ultimately can't scramble back into the society that has maimed him. Jerry Rubin appears in a whole series of guises-from young Jimmy Olsen-type reporter to revolutionary vaudevillian. And, in what is possibly the best piece of the lot, Lukas follows young Watts poet Johnny Scott into streets where "dogs: strays and wanderers, wild scruffy hounds with yellow fangs and frothy lips...

Author: By Gregg J. Kilday, | Title: Fathers and Sons Children of the American Dream | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

...publishing firm of R. I. Polk and the Michigan Automobile Club are about to quit the city. Circus World is moving its toy warehouse from the fringe of the ghetto to Royal Oak to escape break-ins (80 in six months), fire bombs, sniper bullets, and what President Sidney Rubin calls "almost continual stoning." Laments Rubin: "We had to put our crews on 24-hour shifts to protect the property. No private security patrol would take us as a client. We feared for the safety of our employees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Why Companies Are Fleeing the Cities | 4/26/1971 | See Source »

...Psychology; E. L. Patullo, director, Center for the Behavioral Sciences; Martin Peretz, assistant professor of Social Studies; Charles P. Price, Preacher to the University; John B. Radner, assistant professor of English; Robert Rosenthal, professor of Social Psychology; Robert A. Rothstein, assistant professor of Slavic Languages and Literature; Zick Rubin, assistant professor of Social Psychology; Samuel Sampson, lecturer in Sociology; T. J. Shankland, assistant professor of Geology; Bert Shapiro, assistant professor of Biology...

Author: By M. DAVID Landau, | Title: Only 68 Professors Sign Open Letter to Kissinger | 3/31/1971 | See Source »

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