Scholarship and Blackness.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. is an African-American historian. He attended Yale University in the late '60s. The New York Times describes Gates as "a 41-year-old academic entrepreneur who has been one of the most sought-after scholars in the country in the last decade." Gates has taught at Yale, Cornell and Duke. Now he's been recruited to revitalize Harvard's African-American studies department, serving as its new chairman. He's written for Newsweek, Time, and The Nation. He recently interviewed Spike Lee on his controversial film about Malcolm X for the New York Times, and has also written a book called "Loose Canons: Notes on the Culture Wars," about multiculturalism. (Oxford University Press).
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Other segments from the episode on June 8, 1992
Actor David Mcallum.
Actor David McCallum. He's still known for the TV role he had back in the 60s, as secret agent Illya Kuryakin in "The Man From UNCLE." Since then, he's had dozens of stage, TV, and movie roles. Currently, he has a supporting role as a police detective in the new English movie "Hear My Song." (REBROADCAST. ORIGINALLY AIRED 2/13/92)
A Wise and Winning Adult Novel.
Book critic John Leonard reviews "The Secret Defector," the new novel by Clancy Sigal.
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