Word: blatantly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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While this is not a case of large-scale plagiarism, questions are raised as to the boundary between one critic's inspiration by another's analysis, and the blatant use of published material without acknowledgement. It is naive to suppose that no critic takes notice of another critic's comments, but how can one account for such coincidental comments...
...Coop amendment ballot which members have recently received should be understood for what it is: a blatant attempt on the part of certain Law and Business School professors, incumbent Coop officers, to perpetuate their tenure. Not content with making the nominating procedure for non-student directors so arduous that of the several submitted petitions only one has ever been accepted, they now proceed to the ultimate solution: abandoning free elections altogether. Nothing could be more contrary to the spirit of cooperative enterprise than to consign the representation of 35,000 non-student members to a self-perpetuating group...
...they go to Harvard? They attend classes at Harvard, live at Harvard, graduate from Harvard, so why this farce about Radcliffe? Merger and the Harvard-Radcliffe relationship mean much more than grants and fellowships and equal scholarship money: Merger is a gut issue of exclusion, prejudice, inequality and the blatant unfairness that is Radcliffe. But the other side of merger is the sellout of feminine interests, institutional suicide, putting women under the control of the blatant sexism that is Harvard...
During the last five years, Harvard's racism has become more apparent. The intensification of discriminatory admissions policies, the continuing attacks on the Afro-American Studies Department and the elaboration of various racist theories by Harvard professors, are examples of this. Yet these are only the most blatant manifestations of the way in which racist ideology permeates all aspects of University life...
...government "think highly of Henry Kissinger. He is an intelligent and realistic man, and truly able. So we are favorably disposed toward him." Castro is a pretty realistic man himself, and sometimes the kind of realism that engenders practical compromise leads to ideological confusion. There's a still more blatant contradiction in the interview involving Castro's support for revolutionaries on one condition: "It is essential that they be fighting." Later he reiterates that "armed struggle is necessary" to effect social change, but in between the two statements the Cuban premier claims that "those countries that do not interfere...