Word: dependently
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Some Faculty members understand this, but they are a tiny minority. Charles G. Gross, lecturer on Psychology. proposed at Tuesday's meeting that no portion of the CRR resolution be effective until ratified by a student referendum. "A law to be effective must depend on the consent of the governed," Gross told the Faculty. "It shocks and dismays me that the Faculty seems unaware that these mechanisms are totally unacceptable to the majority of students-not just to the far left...
WHAT WOULD happen to a National Guardsman if he was ordered to fire on student protestors and refused? That, according to Robert Sherill, would depend on a lot of things. It would depend first, on how angry his superiors were: second, on whether the soldier had ever been connected with any left-of-center political groups; third, on how dramatically the press played the incident and the inevitable court-martial; and fourth, on whether any influential civilian figure decided the trial was producing too much heat to permit the military to have...
...guardsman's fate would not depend on whether the order to shoot was justified by threats to the troops' safety, or on whether his firing would contribute to the continuation of a criminal war in Southeast Asia (criminal by the standards of the Nuremberg trials, that is). Nor would it depend, in all probability, on whether the soldier was psychotic, mentally retarded, or hard-of-hearing...
...domestic Marshall Plan. Why don't we set 1976 as a target date-the 200th anniversary of the founding of this country. Set a time program, like Kennedy did for the Space Program when we say, this year we're going to do this, this year you can depend on this, all looking toward...
...series, which can produce 660 copies per hour on ordinary paper and sells for $5,500. The Xerox 660-1 model rents for $60 a month plus 4½? per copy, and the Xerox 660-3 rents for $100 a month plus 2? to 4½? per copy, depending on the quantity actually made. Like other Xerox models, the 660s depend on a patented process called xerography (from the Greek, meaning dry writing), which uses light and heat to transfer images. Both the Xerox machines and IBM's new entry turn out copies of similar legibility...