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Word: attractants (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Mary Louise Phillips, a Vassar art major he had met at a postfootball party at Yale. She quit in her senior year to marry him; they now have five children.* Eager for a career in public affairs, he entered Harvard Law School in 1945, because "law schools seem to attract an extraordinary number of the people who have the highest potential of each generation." He made the Harvard Law Review, graduated magna cum laude...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Universities: Anxiety Behind the Facade | 6/23/1967 | See Source »

Such corporate ability is bound to attract attention outside academe. Last week Perkins submitted his resignation to Delaware's board of trustees, announced that in September he will become president of Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., where he will serve under Chairman and Chief Executive J. Wilson Newman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Executives: Goodbye, Academe | 6/23/1967 | See Source »

...failure of the Music Department is three-fold: to be the kind of department that attracts secondary school students seriously interested in studying music in college; to act as the center of, or even take an active part in, the musical life of the college; and to attract the most exciting musicians as concentrators. This has led to the peculiar situation in which it is considered ignominious to concentrate in music, and the categories of "musician" and "music major" are almost mutually exclusive. If someone is a flutist and a physics major or a 'cellist and concentrator in history...

Author: By Robert G. Kopelson, | Title: Music at Harvard: Neither Craft nor Art; It Combines Display, Arrogance, Delight | 6/15/1967 | See Source »

...building a movement or radical social change. SDS is turning from the tactics of protest and confrontation--marches, pickets and sit-ins--to those of organization and resistance. Although the students will continue to utilize dramatic, "one-shot" incidents of protest to attract publicity and membership, they are shifting, as national vice president, Carl Davidson, puts it, "to dig in for the long haul, to become full-time, radical, sustained, relevant." Marches, says a Chicago SDSer, "are just not enough. They won't stop this war. More important, they won't stop the military industrial complex, the powerful institutions that...

Author: By Richard Blumenthal, | Title: SDS Shifting From Protest to Organizing | 6/15/1967 | See Source »

...fails in its practical objective of significantly increasing pressure on the government to end the war in some unmilitary manner, it will have had the effect of carrying on a process that has been evident throughout the past year. Just as the Harvard chapter of SDS was able to attract a surprisingly large number of members this year because of the dearth of any other serious anti-war groups in Cambridge, so too should Vietnam Summer serve the purpose of involving moderate and formerly reluctant students with more radical forms of anti-war political protest. It will happen even more...

Author: By John A. Herfort, | Title: War Protest at Harvard Shifts To Radical, Moderate Coalition | 6/15/1967 | See Source »

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