Word: admitting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...editorial page. One had only to read the issue in question to discover that the charge had no basis in fact. But censors, at B.U. as everywhere, rarely read; they attack, they condemn, which they bring their own prejudices and opinions to issues on which they will admit of no legitimate opposition...
...close vote last year--47 to 47 on whether the resolution to admit Red China needed a majority to pass--apparently frightened the Administration into reevaluating the present policy over the summer. During his recent trip to Taiwan Secretary of State Rusk warned the Nationalists that a change in policy might be necessary in the next session. Ambassador Goldberg said late in August that the government was actively reexamining its admission policy. In background briefings to major newspapers, top-level officials indicated that the policy would be altered this session...
Pahnke and Richards admit that some religious leaders disapprove of entering the "holy ground of the unconscious" with the use of psychedelic drugs, "protesting against the exploration of 'inner space' as they have campaigned against the exploration of outer space." Nonetheless, they conclude that the answer is not suppression of drug-assisted mysticism but "informed education and an expanded program of research...
...ALUMINUM. The Common Market is trying to retain its present 9% tariff on primary aluminum, but has offered to admit a token quota of 100,000 tons at a lower rate of 5%. The U.S., which levies 51% on aluminum, and other countries want the Common Market to reduce its basic rate, would prefer to make aluminum duty-free everywhere...
...fraudulence is fascinating" say the publishers, and it is even more fascinating than they admit. On the surface, this novel by the well-praised author of The Man Who Loved Chil dren (TIME, April 2, 1965) is a finely if lushly written story about Nellie Cotter, a left-wing journalist and later a raffish London bohemian. Nellie is the most forceful character in the Cotter family, whose life offers a sad insight into the awful milieu of the British working class in the industrial landscape of the Tyneside. A feast for the Cotters is one chicken in the pot, brought...