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Participants in the panel were: Michael McEthe, a Harvard gradate student who led a Black trade union in South Africa; Daniel A. Swanson '74, a reporter who traveled in South Africa while writing under the pseudonym James North; Donald Norland, former U.S. Ambassador to four African nations; and Kenneth Carstens, a South African academic who now heads a fund to provide legal aid to political prisoners in South Africa...

Author: By Emily J. Ozer, | Title: South Africa Conference Brings 100 to K-School | 4/22/1985 | See Source »

...Swanson advocated divestment as well as economic sanctions, and Carstens refuted the argument that the withdrawal of American investment would necessarily hurt South African Blacks...

Author: By Emily J. Ozer, | Title: South Africa Conference Brings 100 to K-School | 4/22/1985 | See Source »

...tried to layer it with some humanity and real characters. I didn't think anything was tasteless as long as it was funny." But tasteless is not really in the vocabulary of a gross-out scriptwriter. Some movie people shiver when they think of great film scenes: Gloria Swanson descending the stairs at the end of Sunset Boulevard, or Humphrey Bogart and Claude Rains walking into the fog at the conclusion of Casablanca. Gross-out writers receive a similar thrill when they remember John Belushi filling his mouth with mashed potatoes in Animal House--and then popping his cheeks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: And Animal House BEGAT . . . | 4/15/1985 | See Source »

...probably gave [some faculty] some information they wouldn't have known. People are discussing the issue all the time," said teaching fellow Daniel G. Swanson...

Author: By Melissa I. Weissberg, | Title: Ec 10 Report Asks for Return of Radical Sections | 11/1/1984 | See Source »

...enjoined from using doctors. The Fort Wayne 'News-Sentinel, which closely follows the church, estimates -that 63 followers in eight states have died since 1976 because they would not accept medical treatment. Of these, 43 were children. In a particularly shocking incident in 1981, one-year-old Evie Swanson of Attica, Ind., received second-and third-degree burns when scalding tea spilled over her. Infection set in, was left untreated, and Evie died two days later. In another case, newborn Joel David Hall of Whitley County, Ind., died in February from pneumonia even though, as County Coroner Alfred Allina...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Matters of Faith and Death | 4/16/1984 | See Source »

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