Word: entailed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...achieving a sufficient change in that military balance would entail enormous costs. Senator Stennis, chairman of the Senate Armed Forces Preparedness Committee, has estimated that a moderate escalation would require at least 600,000 men by the end of this year; other estimates are considerably higher. The casualties in such a war should be enormous, and the fighting might go on for five years or more, as Vice-President Humphrey estimated last week...
Israel said that in a discussion among local members of the May 2nd Commitee, the alternatives seemed to be before a "cannibalistic" policy whereby M2M would remain in competition with SDS in the recruiting of dynamic members and a "cooperative" policy which would entail members of M2M working in SDS toward a common goal. "It was decided unanimously to follow the latter policy," Israel reported. "I don't think we could pull recruits out of SDS anyway," he added...
Qualified faculty members are often reluctant to shoulder the burden of entertaining, counseling and administration which masterships entail. Men like Hersey, who can summon the power of the artist, reporter, and statesman into the kingdom of the teacher might pump a little new life into the House system. We hope that the University will consider appointing such men, perhaps on a one-year basis, when masterships open in the coming year. The idea is worthy of experiment...
...were guided not by "anticipation of the futility of protest," but by the belief that our inaction might seriously harm a Program to which we felt a moral obligation: not by "(anticipation of) the harassment (protest) might entail," but by the reasoned judgment that renouncing our awards and insulting the President was an inappropriate, fruitless, and irresponsible way to express our political views. Amory B. Lovins...
...inaccurate to report only on the Scholars who refused to think. But these students who did nothing or rushed to protect themselves were in part guided by anticipation of the futility of protest, or worse the harassment it might entail (perhaps the loss of a grant to keep them in school until too old for the draft). The CRIMSON, as a newspaper in a democracy and a university, has an obligation and opportunity to help change these attitudes, which makes it imperative that you publicize individual protests. Since the three Scholars who did act were all Harvard-Radcliffe students, your...