Word: forded
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Recognizing the possibility of such a confrontation, Deans Ford and Glimp have stated that a demonstration will be considered "disorderly" or "unacceptable" not only if it physically obstructs the recruiter (or students who are trying to see him) but also if it "inhibits his movement." Glimp defined "inhibition" as putting the man in a position where he would have to do something he does not want to do--such as step on a person or push a person--in order to move freely. While this definition is certainly vague and does not account for all conceivable forms of Dow protest...
Maurice Sendak, prize winning author of childrens' books will discuss "The World of Children's Books," tonight at 3 p.m. in the Lowell House Junior Common Room as part of the Lowell Ford Speakers Program...
...SOME meetings, they get up and go home," Dean Ford said as he stepped into his office, "others, they stand out there in the corridors talking about what has happened." Tuesday's Faculty meeting belonged to the latter sort. The Faculty had unexpectedly spent almost half its meeting debating whether the campus visit of the Dow Chemical Company next week should be postponed. That was excitement enough, but in addition the meeting produced a new, and much clearer definition of the role the Student Faculty Advisory Council is likely to have in University decision-making...
...case, the Faculty vote cemented Dow's return to Harvard next Friday. If there ever was a chance that Dow recruiters would be kept away by private phone calls from administrators, it is gone now. The visit has been scheduled since last March, and both President Pusey and Dean Ford say that fact is one good reason for not trying to get it cancelled, even on pragmatic grounds. If Dow had set up the appointment after the October demonstration, there might have been substantial Faculty feeling that the University was precipitating a confrontation...
Heather McHugh's delicate craftsmanship allows her to write about a girl reflecting, in bed in winter, without degenerating to the Cliffie poem genre which leaves that undergraduate aftertaste to most college literary magazines. David Rubenstein successfully conceives a "Buddhist in a Ford," and John Black '38 interweaves his images into a haunting organic whole...