Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...ones responsible for the breakdown of democratic processes. But how much patience should one ask of those with such grievances? In such situations it seems to me that the fundamental responsibility for the breakdown of law and order rests upon those who determine a society's policies and who benefit from them...
...punitive measures. For repression to work it is already much too late, even at Harvard. The "subversion" has already advanced much too far. Intelligent and tacit recognition of this fact by both sides may just possibly enable the process to work itself out in such a way as to benefit the overwhelming majority of the students and the faculty. Actually the subversion amounts, I think, to an effort to return to the traditional conception of a university as a place where young and old may come together in search of humane values, truth and beauty...
Johnathan Kozol '58, author of Death at an Early Age, will speak at 8 p.m. in Quincy House for the benefit of the New School for Roxbury...
...Administration claims that business corporations are brought to Harvard for the students' benefit. Even if this justification be accepted, it still must be determined, 1) whether the students do in fact desire the presence of these extra-university elements on the campus; and 2) whether the moral character of these elements is such that the university is willing to make available to them its name, reputation, facilities, and student body...
...result, Harvard liberals take up afternoon causes--like PBH projects or running art sales for the benefit of Mississippi Negroes. A few work for liberal candidates like John F. Kennedy or Kevin White. But primarily, there is a breakfast-table-argument aura to it all. No one bleeds...