Word: wrights
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...wait for clarification from the court. In Manhattan, for example, police have been under heavy pressure for months to solve the grisly murders of two women who were stabbed to death in self-service elevators with a total of 52 knife thrusts. Last week the police arrested Charles E. Wright, 21, a Columbia University kitchen helper. But in sharp contrast to previous cases, the cops made no effort to trumpet their triumph. They refused to say whether Suspect Wright confessed, or even whether he has a police record...
...such articles are not representative. Rather than boring rehashes of past events, features in the yearbook analyze or argue: "House Drama: A Play wright's Remedy," "Why Virtuosos Survice at Harvard, Or Do They?" "Harvard's New Radicals." One may of course find these sloppily written or insufficiently argued. No longer, however, can they be summarily dismissed as superficial and bankrupt...
...broad jump, none of the competitors has looked particularly impressive this spring. The edge would seem to belong to Pennsylvania's Ed Anderson with Yale's Walt Wright, Harvard's Awori, and Navy's Bill Bliss all getting a share of the points...
Anderson should have less trouble in the triple jump. Yale's Wright and Princeton's Mel Branch are almost a foot short of the Quaker star's 47-ft. efforts...
John Doar, Chief of the civil rights division of the Department of Justice; Robert F. Drinan, S. J., dean of the Boston College School of Law; Marian Elizabeth Wright, Legal Defense Fund attorney in Jackson, Miss.; and Bayard Rustin, organizer of the 1963 march of Washington, will also speak...