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Daniel Ellsberg
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Haiphong, Kissinger, and William Colby
Nixon's policy as of early '69 was to win the Vietnam War, in a way as Johnson had tried to
Wassily Leontief
One of the most carefully guarded files in the Littauer Building is a folder of eighty odd sketches of members
All-American Spy
Dusting off some old notes before generals. I came across an almost verbatim episode of a radio series I followed
On the Shelf
The editors of the Advocate have been fortunate in bringing together a series of critical articles on Faulkner that are
The Moviegoer
Like a cannon rolling loose on the deck of a frigate, Marlon Brando crashes through "Streetcar," malicious and violent. Screeching
The Moviegoer
Some people come to college and spend four years in a chemistry lab. Others put in incredible amounts of time
On the Shelf
Two stories in this issue of The Advocate are unusually well-written. Neither is of a type that rewards a casual
The Playgoer
The structure of "Right You Are" follows a simple formula. In the first scene Pirandello's mouthpiece, Laudisi, tosses out a
THE MOVIEGOER
"No Way Out" is a picture inciting to violence. Like "Home of the Brave," it relies partly on the shock-effect
CABBAGES & KINGS
Freshmen at BU were unusually eager to sign up for ROTC this fall. When questioned, many of them blurted out:
CABBAGES & KINGS
"The creation of dianetics is a milestone for man comparable to his discovery of fire and superior to his inventions
AMA: III
No one knows all the answers about compulsory medical insurance. The American Medical Association, among others, has raised some of
BRASS TACKS
(This article is the second on the political record of the American Medical Association. A third article will discuss the
BRASS TACKS
(This article, the first of three on the American Medical Association, describes the AMA's present political influence. Later articles will
BRASS TACKS
Last summer near Albuquerque, New Mexico some General Electric technicians set out to do something about the weather. On July