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Writer

Stephen J. Chapman

Latest Content

Knockout in Texas

M ISERY LOVES company, and maybe that explains the kind words Muhammed Ali had for President Ford on "Meet the

Renegades from Radicalism

T HE TWO DECADES following the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia make up one of the most unusual and provocative chapters

Nazi Notebooks

D IARIES ARE USUALLY the accompaniment of a lived life. This one stand in place of a life." On that

Tools of Loneliness

I N SIXTY YEARS I've left a lot of tracks," wrote John Steinbeck in 1962, when confronted with the idea

Ducking the Punch

I N 1789, ITS first year of operation, the United States Post Office inaugurated one of the hardiest of American

Cerberus of the Right

On the surface, George F. Will is an enigma, a man of contradictions and paradoxes who doesn't fit into any

Fighting the Urge

I T USED TO BE SAID of Lyndon Johnson that whenever he felt the urge to sacrifice a little political

Gold Says Harvard Neglect of Judaism Is Worst in Ivies

Rabbi Ben-Zion Gold, director of Hillel, said last night at a small Currier House dinner that "Judaism is treated worse

Joszef Cardinal Mindszenty (1892-1975)

I T HAS OFTEN been said that ours is an antiheroic age. Nonetheless, Christians have had their share of martyrs

An Uncertain Vindication

B EFORE HIS INDICTMENT last August for bribery and perjury, John Connally was a man to be envied. A skilled

Kinky Country

T HE HEART AND SOUL of country music has always been its closeness to country people. Since its beginnings among

Cowboys, Oil and Braggadocio

T RYING TO come to terms with a state as huge and varied as Texas in a single magazine issue

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