Word: distinction
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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William Alfred 5G, teaching fellow in English, initiates the Morris Grey Poetry Foundation's series of readings by younger poets at 4 p.m. this afternoon in Harvard 6. The readings by the young poets mark a distinct policy change by the Foundation...
...them despise it. They don't like spending one or two hours a day on hot, crowded buses and subways. They don't like missing the companionship and excitement of dormitory life. Most of all, the commuters have no great affection for the University and many feel a distinct antagonism to resident students. Eighty percent of the daily travelers believe that they are treated as inferior Harvard men; they don't feel that they are given an even break from the University. They are probably right...
With the arrival of Fischelis as graduate secretary last fall, Dudley spirit and activity took a distinct turn upward...
...fine Nov. 5 analysis of Clarence Hall's and Desier Holisher's U.S. Protestant Panorama. I would, though, like to take issue with the implication that "there are at least signs that-faced with the growth of the Roman Catholic Church . . ." It is, to be sure, a distinct challenge to be "faced" with the growth of any religious body. Even though quantity does not prove the point, the Protestant faith is not only outstripping the population growth by a great deal, but growing more rapidly than our brethren of the Roman Church-and we do not bring members...
Basic Definitions. What bothers Pound much more is that basic definitions of law and justice are now more obscured than ever. The law, he writes, has three distinct and necessary meanings: i) "a regime of social control"; 2) "the body of authoritative guides to ... decision"; 3) "the judicial process." The realists, Pound holds, destroy the whole purpose of the law by scrapping the second meaning-"a taught tradition of experience developed by reason and reason tested by experience...