Herbert Marcuse ends up in lotus land, Ishmael Reed visits Quincy Troupe at UCSD

Jacob and Rita Bronowski stranded in La Jolla, Dr. Spock welcomed by Deepak Chopra, Italo Scanga, Whoopi Goldberg, Carl Rogers and his wayward disciple

She and several other students asked a nonstudent friend if he would sit in Marcuse’s large survey courses with a gun, “just in case.”

Angel of the Apocalypse

During that long, violent spring of 1968, leftist student leaders around the world began to quote Marcuse and claim his ideas as inspiration to their movements. By June worldwide media had dubbed Marcuse the “Father of the New Left” and “Angel of the Apocalypse.” Ramparts magazine noted, “When the improbable student rebellions of West Berlin, Morningside Heights, and the Sorbonne broke out this spring, all agreed that Herbert Marcuse was the Marx of the children of the new bourgeoisie.”

By Judith Moore, Sept. 11, 1986 | Read full article

Troupe was working on a novel about a young black American living in exile in Paris. Looking back upon the novel, he now says that it was terrible.

Can Poetry's Big Daddy Deliver San Diego?

Troupe vowed never to speak to Crouch again, and in a sort of farewell-to-New York article that appeared in Newsday shortly before Quincy and Margaret moved to San Diego, Troupe warned that Crouch was a pit bull who is kept chained in a dungeon by some members of the neo-conservative Jewish right, only to be let out once in a while to attack famous blacks or those literary blacks whom the neo-conservatives feel are their main competition.

By Ishmael Reed, Dec. 16, 1993 | Read full article

Jacob Bronowski was “disappointed” as he watched the Salk become “a complete biological institute.”

Stranded in La Jolla

Salk had $25 million from the National Foundation and hired American architect Louis Kahn to design it. “My husband looked at the plans and asked, ‘What is this going to cost you?’ and Jonas said, 'We’ll be lucky if we get out for $5 million.’ And Bruno laughed. For years they only had one building with the electricity on. The twin building was empty, and they had to keep on raising money and raising money.”

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By Phyllis Orrick, March 14, 1996 | Read full article

Dr. Spock, May 1997. "I’ve been afraid of the day when I’d be senile. And I still haven’t gotten over that.” (D.Fineham/Sygma)

Childhood’s End

Chopra’s Center for Well Being was located in Del Mar, and she and Dr. Spock moved there, living in an apartment at L’Auberge until they bought a 22-foot Winnebago. In it, “We lived mostly out in the desert,” she told me. A cold winter prompted them to move to Florida, but the landscape there disappointed them. “It was warm, but it was very, very flat.” So they came back to San Diego a year ago.

By Jeannette De Wyze, Nov. 20, 1997 | Read full article

Italo with assistants. Sometimes people criticize him for diluvial “overproduction."

Hunger Sculptor

“We slept on piles of chestnuts smelling of mildew, and there was never anything to eat except moldy chestnut bread and a few figs. Every shop, every business in the area was boarded up on account of the war. There was no bread, no flour, no oil. Sometimes, before, we’d had a little pasta with a bit of fish. But I clearly remember that on Christmas Day of 1944 we had absolutely nothing to eat.”

By Dan Hofstadter, March 26, 1998 | Read full article

Unlike many actresses with more extensive classical training and experience, Whoopi found the right tone immediately. (Mikhail Zlatkovsky)

Bursting With the Relentless Energy of All Human Life

Do you remember the spastic woman, all crumpled into herself, her limbs twisted, her voice a raucous bray between inarticulate lips? How — of all things — she went to a dance; how a tall, handsome man drew her onto the dance floor; how, before our very eyes, she blossomed, expanded, straightened up, became free and beautiful, and spoke with ease and grace; how she fantasized a lasting relationship with this man, but how nothing permanent came of his pity…

By Jonathan Saville, May 13, 1993 | Read full article

Clark Gable, David O. Selznick, and Louis B. Mayer signing the Gone with the Wind contract

I’m Leaving Now, Mr. Selznick

"I said to her, ‘Miss Garbo, I didn’t hear you. What did you say?’ She put her arm around my shoulders and leaned her face over so her cheek touched mine, and talking in my ear she repeated what she had said. I nearly fainted. She smelled so good and her voice was so beautiful, I just succumbed to the moment. I said, ‘If I’m ever going to become a lesbian, this is my moment, believe me.’"

By Ernie Grimm, Nov. 25, 1998 | Read full article

Empathetic listening remains one of the key concepts with Rogers.

Encounters with Carl Rogers

He asks me why I am writing an article for a local publication, and suggests that I do a story about him for a national magazine. Rogers is obviously miffed by the critique in the January issue of Psychology Today, in which Benjamin De Mott accuses Rogers of “nothing other than the professionalism of compassion: flower people cosseting others for fees…” Rogers tells me that he won't allow his picture to be taken for a San Diego paper.

By Eleanor Widmer, August 9, 1979 | Read full article

At Arizona State, Coulson says he was confronted with more evidence that tended to push him in one direction — away from Rogers’s doctrines.

An Encounter with Bill Coulson

By the end of 1976, the Coulson family returned to La Jolla, and another development reinforced Coulson’s growing convictions. On a whim, the family formed a Dixieland jazz band that began its career by appearing on television’s Gong Show and eventually performed everywhere from Disneyland to the Kennedy Center. Coulson says that experience made a mockery of the notion that democratic, nondirective processes worked best in all areas of life.

By Jeannette De Wyze, Aug. 20, 1987 | Read full article

Marcuse. Virginia called two weeks ago. “He’s gone Greg.” I cried.

On the Death of Marcuse

Virginia and I attended most of Marcuse’s lectures around San Diego to find what strange new textures he wove from customary philosophical terms. Once he spoke about a poem by Rilke and was a poet himself, painting the two women on a rock more impressively, more appealingly — more beautifully — than the author. "The happy moment wants eternity,” he said in that talk and several afterwards. We noticed that he had begun to stoop.

By Greg Grubelich, Aug. 16, 1979 | Read full article

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