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Seventeen years later, Ginsberg finds himself alone, many of his closest friends dead, most of his contemporaries retreating into a more reserved, intellectualized version of a poetry he helped to create. The Fall Of America continues Ginsberg's undaunted quest for his own separate but absolute reality. ("Iron Horse," along...

Author: By Gregory F. Lawless, | Title: Ginsberg in the '70s | 5/11/1973 | See Source »

For reasons that may be developed, I have never been impressed by the arguments that the fetus has a potential for human capacities, for rationality and that its rights are therefore grounded on that potential. I think that arguments based on potential cannot convincingly be made to prove only what...

Author: By Charles Fried, | Title: Abortion: Legal Rights and Social Values | 5/1/1973 | See Source »

For Mrs. Luce, the revival has already been an exercise in déjà vu. Though she, like many younger women in the women's movement, sees the play almost as a tract for Women's Lib, the out-of-town critics, like their predecessors a generation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The Women's Woman | 4/30/1973 | See Source »

"Come, Makers. Be makers of our own Age. Be obstreperous." It goes on, in a kind of heroic nautical language of personified abstractions ("Mediocrity," "Presence," "Vision,") to call poets passionately to action as artists and leaders of the age. Dey's analysis is that too many poets are bored, sloppy...

Author: By Bill Beckett, | Title: Dog Days for Younger Poets | 4/11/1973 | See Source »

Much of the torture was intended to force "confessions" or extract information. Often prisoners were beaten until unconscious to get them to sign statements about the "humanity" of their treatment. U.S. officials figure that as many as 95% of the P.O.W.s captured before 1970 were tortured. Almost all broke. Said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: P.O.W.S: At Last the Story Can Be Told | 4/9/1973 | See Source »

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