Word: clearers
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Well, readers, nothing's wrong except that the Crimson has moved into the twentieth century. Over the summer we converted to a photo-offset printing process. There are advantages and disadvantages. The advantages are that our pictures come out much clearer, our layout is more flexible, and we save a lot of money. We can now print any piece of junk that strikes our fancy (see right) simply by sticking it on a layout sheet and sending it out to Lowell, where the paper is now printed...
...Surrender, Nowhere was that view clearer than in Black's absolutist interpretation of the First Amendment as protecting all speech, yet he found that the amendment's wording could not be extended to protect such actions as flag or draft-card burning. Last year Black wrote: "I believe the court has no power to add to or subtract from the procedures set forth by the Founders. I shall not at any time surrender my belief that that document itself should be our guide, not our own concept of what is fair, decent and right...
...make his ultimatum for foreign revaluation even clearer, Nixon also slapped the 10% surtax on imports to the U.S. The draftsmen of the President's program candidly admitted that the tax is a bargaining chip to be used in winning revaluation of strong currencies against the dollar to the full extent the U.S. deems necessary (around 12%). The tax is also designed to obtain some other concessions, including bigger subsidies from U.S. allies for the maintenance of G.I.s in NATO countries and the removal of import quotas and other nontariff barriers that hurt sales of U.S. goods abroad...
...McGeorge Bundy. Under Nixon, there have been efforts to elicit a more systematic range of views from federal agencies, but whether they get any closer to the top man is doubtful. There is no convincing indication that the psychology and life-or-death motivation of the enemy is any clearer to Nixon officials, and fears of a U.S. "defeat" still unduly haunt the White House. The exaggerated claims of success in Laos and Cambodia carry hints of continuing attempts at deception. But Nixon is of course disengaging, however slowly, and that is in itself proof of a new realism...
...costs to the nation for graduate education are now enormously greater than undergraduate costs. Might it not be advisable to prune the specialist superstructure and use the money to expand community colleges? Would not clearer priorities dictate improving urban public schools...