Word: admittedly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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When Congress quietly passed a bill tying federal aid to the requirement that U.S. medical schools admit American students now in foreign med schools, Harvard loaded up its legislative guns and prepared to fight. But the Med School has quietly accepted this administrative ruling on DNA research...
Although The Advocate was the first Harvard publication to admit women to its staff, it has never had a woman president, Douglas A. McIntyre '77, the literary journal's president, said yesterday. McIntyre "wouldn't be surprised" to see a woman as president within the next few years, he added. probably be a woman, because its staff consists almost entirely of women, David Godolphin '78, editor-in-chief of the year-old poetry magazine, said yesterday...
Objections to the CRR are straightforward. Its composition is weighted in favor of the Faculty members. There is no separate body to which students can appeal CRR decisions. The CRR can deny students the right to legal counsel when appearing before it, and can admit hearsay evidence against a student. Furthermore, the CRR's charter is extraordinarily vague in defining the offenses that make a student liable for discipline; in fact, almost any administrator can bring a student before the CRR on charges of "interference with members of the University in performance of their normal duties...
Steinbeck has tried to feel the Arthurian apestry, not just to look at it from a distance. The Acts tries to re-weave the fabric of this legend in colorfast and pre-shrunk threads of modern idiom. Casting nostalgia aside, one must admit that any tapestry furnishing the room of a modern mind must be able to go in the wash, to be treated as something useable and abusable, not as a museum piece. Steinbeck has come a long way towards making Arthur wash...
...life, and the genius of his novels is that he also knew how to write in the idiom of getting along with life. That good old euphimism "the facts of life" is a more profound statement about sexual matters than those who generally resort to it would care to admit. Sex really is the single most unavoidable fact of human existence. If the total abandonment of Miller's men and women to the demands of their bodies, to all kinds of fucking and anything they can think of to go with it, is perceived in a sexist light...