Word: accesses
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...transportation costs of bringing Stan Brakhage and his films from Colorado to New York. This infuriated New York independent film-makers Jonas Mekas and Gregory Markopolous, both of whom led a campaign to stop other New American cinema-makers from exhibiting their films at the Festival. Denied access, therefore, to Brakhage's "Scenes From Under Childhood," and Markopolous's "Galaxie," the best Brockman could come up with were the films of Harry Smith, an avant-garde film-maker of some decades past whose work in color and light, if interesting, is hardly what's happening, baby...
...Perhaps each unit should occupy a floor of a building with their joint facilities located in a floor between. A further refinement might be placing the five curriculum areas in the same area on each floor so that students and staff working in particular curriculum areas could have easy access to their counterparts in the other unit and to the more specialized joint resources located on the floor between the two units by simply moving vertically...
...bridges across canyons. And such building can and should be done without marring the natural beauty of Pittsburgh's rivers, hills, and valleys. Structures which span valleys can also bring together neighborhoods long isolated by topography. Steep hills need not be barriers either to construction or to access routes. Hills and valleys can become architectural assets in planning exciting urban centers for Pittsburgh
...official probe has been made at Harvard. Dean Monro said yesterday that he has no reason to believe LSD is being made here. Until he does, he said, he is not planning to recommend that access to chemicals like lysergic acid be controlled more strictly in the laboratories...
Glowing Goal. In lone dissent, Justice John M. Harlan (grandfather of the present justice) argued that the whole spirit of the amendment was positive: that it ordered states to provide equal access to public facilities of all kinds. But the court then saw the amendment as merely a curb on discriminatory "state action," giving neither the court nor the Congress power to regulate individual behavior. As a result, while states cannot enforce segregation, they are free to deal as they please with private housing discrimination...