Word: belongs
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Prof. Freedberg's statements express the opinion of a majority of the Fine Arts Department, they by no means represent the opinion of all the Department's members. Three members, in fact, belong to the C.P.V.A. (Professors Coolidge, Ackerman and Slive) and one (Prof. Slive) is a member of its Executive Committee...
...peasants. On the other hand, U.S. Special Service troops-"Sneaky Petes"-have made dramatic progress in the north by winning over and training the dark-skinned, aboriginal montagnards. Though they have for centuries been victimized by the lowland Vietnamese, who contemptuously call them Moi (savages), 150,000 montagnards now belong to an aggressive, native force. Help for Bananas. Militarily, the decisive factor in the war to date has been the introduction of some 170 U.S.-piloted helicopter transports, which give the government's troops the advantages of surprise and mobility that had hitherto been the guerrillas' monopoly...
Finally, these recommendations would leave lower-level science Gen Ed courses, i.e., those without scientific prerequisites, open to the unclassifiable experiments in elementary scientific education which departments will not support. Such lower-level courses belong under the guidance of the same organization that should be chosen to direct the freshman seminars, the Committee on General Education. The handsome financial support which is available for Gen Ed courses should attract faculty with ideas to try, and the enthusiasm and originality of the faculty should attract students with minds...
...Buddha, Pascal, St. Joan, Mary Baker Eddy. There are the converts who see a sudden or a slow light for which they surrender their past, like St. Paul or Mary Magdalene or Cardinal Newman. There are those who are willing to defy the class or service to which they belong, like Savonarola or Franklin D. Roosevelt or Billy Mitchell, and those who fulfill their individuality in the sometimes more difficult discipline of submission...
...proposed amendments do not represent any real threat to the American Constitutional system, since it is highly unlikely that any one of them will get near ratification. What they do represent is the grotesque death-rate of outmoded undemocratic state legislatures which are fading into the past where they belong. The fact that the amendments could get as far as they have is a good argument for proceeding with reapportionment as quickly as possible. The sooner the Federal government puts real pressure on the states to comply with the Supreme Court's reapportionment decision, the better...