Word: bursar
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Glimp began the meeting with a short statement outlining reasons for putting some demonstrators on probation, admonishing others, and refusing to punish those who handed in bursar's cards but were never identified inside Mallinckrodt, where the sit-in took place...
About 50 per cent of those polled favored probation or admonition for demonstrators identified as door-blockers. Twenty-five per cent preferred equal punishment--specifically admonition--for everyone who handed in his bursar's card, and only 10 per cent wanted to see no action taken against anyone...
...Putnam and sit-in participants spoke from the steps of Memorial Church, Administration and Faculty members filtered through the fringes of the crowd. They were joined by visiting Dartmouth men in green jackets, students passing out petitions against Central Intelligence Agency recruiting at Harvard, and others collecting more bursar's cards to turn in to the Administation in sympathy...
...night that his statement at the rally did not mean he would withdraw from Harfor a year if just some students were severed. He did say that he thought punishing just a few was impossible to accomplish fairly, and that it betrayed the wishes of all who handed in bursar's cards in sympathy...
...leaders of Wednesday's demonstration should realize that many of the students who supported their action had no intention of violating the law. The 400 bursar's cards which were handed to the Deans represent sympathy with the anti-war cause, but not necessarily endorsement of the tactics employed at Mallinckrodt. There is a significant difference between demonstrators who are so intense in their self-righteousness that they will stop at nothing in their struggle against the war, and those who wish to demonstrate with more moderation and self-restraint...