Word: accesses
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...ability to test immediately should the other violate the agreement. The best deterrent against other nation's testing is the threat that the other will resume and negate the advantage. Thus the U.S. should be willing to reverse its recent insistence on inspection of preparations, not simply because access to secret laboratories is a demand more stringent than those the USSR has already rejected, but precisely because the ability to test on short notice is the sensible, paramilitary means of implementing a test ban treaty...
Behind the secretaries there is a smaller room containing HUAC's million-name file of American Communists. The counsel explains that the file can only be opened by the F.B.I. and other "competent researchers." The general public is denied access to its contents. As the visitor enters, a Committee employee, who was looking through a file drawer, quickly closes it. Atop one bank of filing cabinets are placed all the Committee's publications since its inception in 1938. The row extends nearly five feet. The counsel says with pride that this literature contains the heart of HUAC's work...
Faculty opinion divided over the issue. "I have the fullest confidence that students wouldn't be corrupted by free access to all political opinions," declared a professor of political science who favored admitting Hall...
...October, 1957, the Supreme Court reversed the verdict because Scales' counsel had been denied access to FRI reports. Earlier, in February, 1957, Scales had quit the Communist Party following the Hungarian uprising and Khrushchev's secret speech denouncing Stalin...
...Problem of Overabundance. The Washington beat offers endless possibilities to foreign newsmen, particularly if they are fluent in English-and most are. All have ready access to high-level officials. All have at their fingertips the greatest daily outpouring of source material on earth-U.S. newspapers-and few hesitate to borrow heavily, with or without attribution. "If there is a real problem," says erudite Werner Imhoof of Switzerland's Neue Zürcher Zeitung, "it's that you are overwhelmed by news...