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...performance against Holy Cross last Saturday, JIM KUBACKI leads the nation in total offense with an average of 258 yards per game. BOB BATEMAN of Brown is third after a 248-yard afternoon against URI, and Penn's JACK WIXTED is fifth. Wixted is also listed as the top rusher in the nation, after romping 200 yards in a losing cause to Lehigh. Kubacki is third on the national rushing list...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JOCK SHORTS | 10/2/1975 | See Source »

...tone of the debate would be clear from the outset. Earlier that day Rusher slammed Shockley for forming what he considered conclusions that "are in the main line liberal...

Author: By David J. States, | Title: Shockley's Racism Circus Comes to Yale | 4/23/1975 | See Source »

Some friction did exist between the two. The National Review publisher charged in his first 20-minute segment that he would oppose the government stepping in and sterilizing allegedly genetically inferior blacks. But his view was not formulated out of humane considerations. Rusher simply said he could not, in good conscience, trust the government to run a railroad," let alone do a good job of sterilizing the nation's blacks. But Rusher never contested any of Shockley's theories. He did say that he and Shockley may "have some differences of opinion," but only on the point of the validity...

Author: By David J. States, | Title: Shockley's Racism Circus Comes to Yale | 4/23/1975 | See Source »

...Rusher did not try to thwart Shockley's incessant stream of statements about heredity determining 80 per cent of our intelligence. He skirted Shockley's assumption that the "agony of the American Negro" could be related to his genetic properties, an assumption that Shockley claims could be wrong in only one out of 20,000 cases...

Author: By David J. States, | Title: Shockley's Racism Circus Comes to Yale | 4/23/1975 | See Source »

...hard to imagine where an organization could find a man who was willing to discuss the only the implementation of the bonus plan--its bureaucratic impossibilities, and government meddling. But the YAF reached into its libertarian bullpen and produced the agreeable Rusher. This slow, just plain boring speaker (one Yale dean lunged for a book which he gleefully read upside down for a couple of pages in mid-argument) never moved beyond the gospel according to William F. Buckley. His laissez-faire attitude even extended to his unpolished debating techniques, apparently not improved by his stint...

Author: By David J. States, | Title: Shockley's Racism Circus Comes to Yale | 4/23/1975 | See Source »

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