Word: abolishment
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Strike for the Eight Demands Strike to seize control of your life Strike to return the Paine Hall Scholarships Strike because there's no poetry in your lectures Strike because your roommate was clubbed Strike to abolish ROTC Strike because classes are a bore Strike to smash the corporations Strike because they are trying to squeeze the life...
...knifed the Georgia bureaucracy from 330 departments to 22. He promises to restrain monetary growth while stimulating employment with New Deal-ish measures and busting the trusts. He backs a strong but "streamlined" defense posture and calls for reducing both atomic weapons and power plants. He wouldn't abolish the CIA but would assume responsibility for its actions. He is adamant on Israel, but attributes its recent problems in the U.N. to the United States's "tragic" policies toward Third World nations...
...presently constituted should be abolished. Until it is abolished, however, students must refuse to serve on the committee. The continued boycott should serve as a reminder to the Faculty that the CRR is unfair and objectionable to students, should convince it to abolish...
...GOVERNMENT. Like Ford, Reagan believes the federal establishment should be reduced. His plan: abolish the federal role in welfare, education, housing, Medicaid and some other services. The savings, he contends, would total $90 billion, permitting a 23% cut in federal personal income taxes and an initial $5 billion payment on the national debt. State and local governments would have to take over many of the programs. But he argues that the savings to taxpayers would still be big because the programs would be run more efficiently -quite a few, indeed, would be dropped -and many jobs would be eliminated...
Throughout the first century of Harvard-Yale football contests action has often exceeded the bounds of fair and friendly competition. Increasing violence during the early 1880s compelled the Harvard faculty in 1885 to abolish Ivy League competition. Harvard was still allowed to play non-Ivy League schools, but most players felt, as an Advocate editorial read, that "The game would not be worth the candle. No strong interest can be aroused among the students at large until we are allowed to play Yale and Princeton." In the summer of 1886 the faculty agreed to allow the team to schedule...