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...Harvard winners are: Richard H. Grossman '64, of Lowell House and Beverly Hills, Calif; Alfred F. Guzzetti '64, of Kirkland House and Philadelphia, Pa.; and James A. Shapiro '64, of Leverett House and Chicago, Ill. The fourth winner, Sanford D. Greenberg, of 19 Wendell St., Cambridge, and Buffalo, N.Y., is a second-year government student at the Graduate School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Marshalls Announced | 5/5/1964 | See Source »

...Until we remove the tyranny of the forced option from their lives, we cannot pretend that our system makes equal opportunity possible. Until then, both the words 'free' and 'equal,' instead of declaring what Herbert Croly once called 'the promise of American life,' will remain a mask for privilege." Sanford A. Lakoff Assistant Professor of Government

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DE FACTO SEGREGATION | 3/27/1964 | See Source »

Fantasy? The defenders of the cigarette companies did not dispute the Surgeon General's report that cigarette smoking endangers health. Instead, they put forth their case on the grounds of economic necessity and freedom of enterprise. Said North Carolina Governor Terry Sanford: "We do not label automobiles dangerous, although they are one of the greatest killers. We do not insist that whisky be labeled with advice that one out of 15 who takes a first drink will become an alcoholic." The cigarette company presidents were conspicuously absent, but their attorney argued that only Congress...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tobacco: The Washington Hearings On Cigarette Labeling | 3/27/1964 | See Source »

Parents should not be legally coerced to utilise the "bussing" method of school integration, Sanford A. Lakoff, assistant professor of Government, said yesterday...

Author: By Ann Peck, | Title: 'Bussing' Pupils Limits Freedom, Lakoff Maintains | 3/23/1964 | See Source »

...Sanford's campaign as "education Governor" has meant a 50% jump in the school budget, to a four-year total of $1.14 billion. The state has risen from 46th place to 42nd in spending per pupil. The 1963 assembly not only added to the previous budget for public schools, but also voted for three new four-year colleges and a statewide system of two-year community colleges. Industrial investments of almost $600 million came in during Sanford's first two years, and he credits the lure of better schools. Says the Ford Foundation's admiring President Henry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Public Schools: State of Learning | 1/24/1964 | See Source »

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