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...Seymour Martin Lipset, professor of Government and Social Relations, will probably leave the Faculty at the end of this academic year and accept a tenured position at Stanford University beginning next fall, sources said yesterday...

Author: By James I.kaplan, | Title: Lipset Probably Will Go To Stanford Next Year | 5/27/1975 | See Source »

...past closing time at the Fogg; its galleries, hung in the first thread of twilight, are deserted. Suddenly Seymour Slive, the museum's new director, throws himself into an exhibit just hung for a course in 18th-century French art. He stalks backwards, arms out-flung, palms raised, beckoning. "Look at this picture," he commands, his bulging, saucer eyes electric under the flu's rheumy glaze. "It's a wreck, a total wreck. But I think some of its qualities can still be appreciated, that I can help in our teaching." Slive is right. The canvas is a patchwork...

Author: By Edmond P.V. Horsey, | Title: Emerging From The Fogg | 5/21/1975 | See Source »

Spies and Taxes. The quiet approach was most visible in the prize for national reporting. Many veteran Pulitzer watchers had placed their bets on the Times's Seymour Hersh for his series on the CIA's involvement in domestic spying, which led to the establishment of a presidential investigatory commission. But the Pulitzer board dropped Hersh (along with 16 other entries) in the third round of voting; according to one member, the Times had presented Hersh's material in an "overwritten, overplayed and underproven" manner. The winner: a series by the Philadelphia Inquirer's Donald...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Quiet Pulitzers | 5/19/1975 | See Source »

...from some of the 120 remaining foreign journalists in that city. There were no Times-men, among them. The paper's editors had made sure that its Saigon correspondents had not missed the evacuation there. "If we had to do it again tomorrow," said Assistant Managing Editor Seymour Topping last week, "we would say the same thing to Sydney. We would tell him to guard his personal safety above all." Yet, Topping added: "We understand what his compulsion was, and we wished him well. Sydney is not a novice; he is a professional...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Schanberg's Score | 5/19/1975 | See Source »

...tower of impartial journalism on Plympton St generally stands straight. But "Political Controversies at Harvard, 1636-1974" by Seymour Martin Lipset in "Education and Politics at Harvard," provoked a full page review by Geoffrey Garin on April 12 titled "Fair Harvard Strikes Back...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tilting At Towers | 5/7/1975 | See Source »

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