Word: laide
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...CRIMSON article Saturday on SFAC and the issue of scholarships and probation, I was quoted as saying,... "the issue of selective action was forever laid to rest..." The quotation is inaccurate and the impression it conveys erroneous. The matter rests with the Faculty who may choose to consider and re-consider any issue. This one currently is tabled. Many members of this community, however, are now working for a consistent and feasible resolution of the matter. Inaccurate quotations do not help this effort nor Harvard. Chase N. Peterson '52 Dean of Admissions and Financial Aids
...explained that "the issue of 'selective action' was forever laid to rest' when the Hoffmann resolution, asking exemption of stipend reductions for only Paine Hall demonstrators, was tabled at the last Faculty meeting on February...
...weeks ago, when France brusquely refused to participate in a London meeting of the Western European Union called to discuss approaches to a settlement of the Middle East crisis. The WEU, an international organization consisting of Britain and the six Common Market countries, was established in 1955, and laid out the ground rules for West German rearmament, notably a ban on development of nuclear weapons by Bonn. Since then, it has met intermittently to talk over defense questions and other problems of shared interest...
Such picayune problems as teachers up in arms over pensions and a highway department scandal can have an unsettling effect on a legislature. Last week, however, lawgivers of the sovereign state of Oklahoma laid aside these minor matters to concentrate on a historic decision. Without a dissenting nay, the assembly decreed that the collared lizard, known as "the mountain boomer" amid the hills of Ouachita and Wichita, will henceforth be designated as the Sooner State's official reptile...
...Yale Political Scientist William J. Foltz points out, disruptions in established diplomatic order "tend to take place at times when the world is shifting from one form of world order to another, when the new rules of the game are still being worked out." The old rules, as laid out after 1945, implied that the great powers would guarantee the peace-but that task has found no lasting takers, and the smaller powers thus feel free to make up their own rules...