Word: indirectly
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...Indirect and general methods seem to us the most desirable. We have, thus, introduced the stimulus to experimentation in several courses, proposing such exerimentation in the projected Introduction to Education, as well as in the introductory courses offered by the disciplinary Areas, [divisions of the faculty: humanities, social sciences, psychology] courses which are crucial in bringing the disciplines to bear on the general life of the School. ...We should like here to propose, also, that senior faculty members take major responsibility for introductory courses, which require both a mature grasp of the subject's technicalities, and a relaxed ability...
...duty to build public opinion in favor of a satisfactory solution. He might be criticized by some elements, but the bulk of the Indian people would thank him for relieving them of a great anxiety." Ayub concluded that it was impossible to reach an agreement with the ambivalent and indirect Shastri. They settled into a tenuous coexistence that was punctuated by gunfire earlier this year in the border wasteland of the Rann of Kutch. Britain's Prime Minister Harold Wilson settled that one, bringing Ayub and Shastri to cautious compromise at the Commonwealth Prime Ministers meeting in London last June...
...Branco feel that something more than merely the Ineligibilities Law will indeed be needed to keep his government in power after next year's presidential election. That something is to change Brazil's form of government from presidential to parliamentary, replacing direct election of the President with indirect election by Congress. In such an election, the choice almost certainly would fall on Castello Branco. Until now, he has resisted the change. Last week, with Castello Branco's blessing, a congressional commission began studying a constitutional reform that could open the door to a parliamentary system...
...Trib was piqued enough to offer an editorial answer the same day: "When Mr. Lippmann asks how many Viet Nams the U.S. can defend in Asia, perhaps the best reply is an indirect one. How many are there to be? And if we yield in the present confrontation, how much more difficult will be the next? For better or for worse, the U.S. is the 'policeman' on which the threatened peoples in China's expansionist path depend for whatever hope they have of independence and freedom...
Happily, some U.S. lawyers have never been afraid to defend unpopular people or unpopular causes-even if their efforts cost them dearly in money and community standing. In Birmingham, for example, Lawyer Paul Johnston last week began to pay the price of voluntarily representing FBI Informer Gary Rowe (by indirect request of U.S. Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach) in a lawsuit filed by Ku Klux Klan Lawyer Matt Murphy Jr. "It's not too popular to be involved in such matters around here," said one lawyer. Johnston was voted out of his eminent law firm by his prosperous partners-including...