Word: developers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...conclusion we would like to say that the CRIMSON's editorial assault does serve to make us aware that we in the Agency Corporation, in our earnest effort to respect the concerns of the Harvard Square merchants, have perhaps failed to develop a comparable concern for, and good relationships with, other student organizations in the Harvard community which are dependent on commerce. The Agency Corporation, we now clearly realize for the first time, is different from other student organizations in that it does have a special relationship with the Student Employment Office and an active and interested Board of Directors...
...gave the body-economic a couple of solid thumps and came up with his prescription: some belt-tightening around the soft underbelly of business and labor, a generous dosage of self-reliance, and a faith that the U.S. Government has no intention of letting a full-scale depression develop...
Principles & Rules. In his speech for Law Day 1958, Harvard's Dean Pound makes the careful distinction between Law and laws. Says he: "The vital, the enduring part of the law is in principles -starting points for reasoning-not in rules. Principles remain relatively constant or develop along constant lines. Rules have relatively short lives. They do not develop; they are repealed and are superseded by other rules...
...Here a great opportunity will be won or lost-an opportunity to ensure peace under law. We lawyers must write the necessary legal machinery. To do this we must evaluate world law and develop new international legal machinery to maintain essential national sovereignty, yet provide for the peaceful settlement of disputes between nations under the rule of law." So doing, the U.S. could build on the experience of the past and the possibilities of the present to ensure a peaceful future...
Price Fight. When the Government built the Nicaro plant in 1942, it badly needed ore to feed it. Freeport Sulphur Co. owned a rich ore body just four to eight miles away, and the Government lent $1,100,000 to Freeport to develop the ore. The Government promised to buy at least one-third of Nicaro's ore needs from Freeport through 1968, now gets all of Nicaro's ore from Freeport, pays a royalty of $1.73 per ton, and also pays the cost of extracting the ore. The Bureau of Mines contends that the Government, which operates...