Word: accepting
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Crimson's action in withdrawing the advertisement raises larger questions about the nature of Crimson policy on advertising. A newspaper should not demand that advertisers conform to its editorial positions, and The Crimson will continue to accept advertising from groups and individuals with views radically different from our own. But there are times when the line must be drawn...
...owning and publishing a daily newspaper is a trust, and a newspaper must accept the responsibility for everything which appears in it--news, editorials or advertisements. To set off advertising as a separate entity not subject to moral evaluation would be an abdication of a newspaper's trust and responsibility. The Crimson's advertising columns will remain open to those wishing to communicate with the Crimson readership. But The Crimson reserves the right of judgement with respect to the nature of that communication; racism, explicit or implicit, should not appear in any form in The Crimson...
...left the University at the end of the fall term to accept a contract with the National Endowment for the Arts to conduct policy studies...
Weideger thinks that women will have to accept the reality of cyclical moods and deal with them, if necessary, through exercise or hormone treatment. Feminists are now exchanging home remedies all the way from lower back massage and raspberry leaf tea to taking calcium ("nature's tranquilizer," said Nutritionist Adelle Davis) before their periods. Some ardent feminists are even urging women friends to examine, smell and taste their own menstrual blood as a way of overcoming traditional attitudes toward menstruation. Others are promoting menstrual extraction-a risky suction procedure-to avoid days of bleeding...
...working from within. Even when Farmington members voted overwhelmingly to uphold the club's racial rules (TIME, Feb. 9), Hereford hung on, hoping that the Farmington board of directors would reject the vote. But after the board failed to do so, Hereford said he could no longer accept the club's "segregationist policy" and quit. Eighteen other club members joined Hereford in handing in their resignations, including Jill Rinehart, a Charlottesville councilwoman and wife of the president of Farmington...