Word: effective
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Strange Silence. Less dramatically, an intensive and intelligent program to give the Vietnamese peasant a more equitable, hopeful life is also beginning to take effect. This "other war" has been ardently espoused by the President in the past. Yet most Americans have been left surprisingly uninformed of its successes: the dozens of 59-man teams now fanning out into the countryside to rebuild it; the new schools and clinics that have sprouted in the Delta; the hundreds of thousands of South Vietnamese treated by U.S. military medical teams; and the Allies' slow but steady attempts to create a political...
...third effect is the impetus toward group practice. I use the term here not to describe a financial arrangement or even a formal or informal arrangement for referral, but rather to describe the fact that groups of doctors tend to cluster in hospitals, in clinics and in professional buildings, and they do so because their needs are interdependent. It is not that each is dependent upon the other, but rather that each needs certain common services--x-ray, laboraory...
...effect more difficult to define will be the Institute's impact on its specific target, relations between politicians and scholars. Events in the two years since plans for the Institute were first announced have made it clear that these plans came at an especially fortuitous time. For since that time the scholars and politicians whom the Institute seeks to bring together have been threatening to fly apart entirely. The university community has been heard in public debate, and it has made it clear that it is dissatisfied with the performance of the government. Washington, in turn, has evinced little enthusiasm...
...increasing size of universities -- by 1970, 6,700,000 students will be taught by 480,000 teachers -- and said he thought it impossible for so large a group to exercise no power. He suggested that universities will continue to be principally concerned with foreign policy, and that the effect of this will be "altogether healthy...
...their action will have no effect on the controversial candidacy of Langdon P. Marvin Jr. '41, the first man to campaign for the Board in Harvard's history. Although the names of the six new Overseers will not be announced until this afternoon, reliable sources said yesterday that Marvin's would not be among them...