Word: commits
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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President Pusey said at a press conference last week that the University has "looked everywhere" for funds to finance the Widener expansion, but without success. He said large foundations have so far refused to commit funds for the support of University libraries...
...Roman Emperor Nero with his mistress, Poppea, an affair held in dubious check by Nero's Stoic mentor Seneca. Poppea, slinkily played in Dallas by Patrice Munsel in a white gown slit to the hip, finally turns Nero's golden-curled head, and he orders Seneca to commit suicide. Meanwhile, Nero's wife Octavia and Poppea's husband Ottone plot an assassination. Ottone, clad in his own mistress' dress, sneaks into Poppea's room but is discovered. Nero wrings the story from Ottone's mistress, Drusilla, by torture. He banishes the plotters, sets...
...that since "bail is limited to providing assurance that the accused will appear for trial . . . [the travel restriction] deprives them of liberty without due process of law." The prosecution argues (accurately enough) that the defendants hope to arouse public ire against the Cuban travel ban. "The court need not commit judicial suicide by allowing issues before it to be pretried publicly for the avowed purpose of stimulating appeal for the defendants cause." The court is scheduled to rule on the motion in the next week...
...actually looking at the works discussed. Students are not trained to see. They learn about paintings and statues as historical events, not as unique creations capable of evoking intense emotional responses. The sensual aspects of art are completely obscured by the intellectual. Of course, not all Fine Arts courses commit these sins (Professor Slive's are frequently mentioned as exceptions), but most do. As a result, students who are interested in the visual arts but have no desire to become art historians develop a rebellious attitude toward the whole academic system...
...such a rethinking indicates that defeat of the South Vietnamese government would be tantamount to victory for the Chinese and mortally injurious to essential American interests in Asia or elsewhere, the United States should commit itself to whatever effort is necessary to overcome the Vietcong soon. If the reappraisal indicates anything less than Chinese hegemony following a Vietcong victory, the test of whether U.S. troops continue fighting for Saigon should be whether they can be withdrawn by the end of 1965, beginning on a regular schedule at the end of this year. This might open the field to the Vietcong...