Word: laws
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...only the third time since 1945, the Law School Faculty has denied tenure to an assistant professor--and a lot of law students are upset about...
Morgan Shipman, assistant professor of Law, yesterday called the Faculty's vote denying him tenure "totally wrong and unjustified." But Shipman said he had agreed with Acting Dean A James Casner that "this is the kind of thing you can't debate in public...
...those groups was evidently the five-man fact-finding board, headed by Archibald Cox '34, Samuel Williston Professor of Law. The strikers previously refused to talk with the board when it asked representatives to speak...
...political coalition. Through increasingly subtle methods of acculturation, the powerful interest group has asserted its own will on the majority. The majority have been manipulated to misconstrue their own interest as coincident with the interest of the powerful interest group that dominates important decision-making. Thus the preservation of law and order, desirable in itself, becomes the preservation of the status quo, which promotes the de facto disenfranchisement of the majority. The paradox of the "consciousness" of the majority is such that it conceives of the present political system as in its own interest. For example, it is clearly...
...that the demonstrators had failed to arouse a new "consciousness" in their fellow students. Their cause was lost unless they could pull something out of their collective hat at the last minute. The administration sensed the student support for its position, and was willing to use force to regain law and order. The administration had hesitated for so long because given the highly unorthodox situation of the occupied buildings, the demonstrators had the advantage, on a small scale, that the administration had on the larger one. The status quo was temporarily on the side of the student demonstrators. To regain...