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Word: limits (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...week. The peepholes are a very passive sort of security and can be used or ignored as the individual student wishes. But the electronic door system, now nearing completion in Eliot House is a different matter. The locking system, masterminded by a Honeywell Delta 2000 computer, will limit access to Eliot to House members and threatens to make inter-House visits difficult or inconvenient...

Author: By Andrew P. Corty, | Title: House Security: The Other Side of the Peephole | 3/5/1973 | See Source »

When the age limit officially dropped from 21 to 18 at midnight Wednesday, the paragons of loud music and hip conversation--Jack's, Charlie's Place, and so forth--were swamped by ecstatic teens and bearded college sophomores trying not to look the part...

Author: By Robert Decherd, | Title: Teen-Agers Are On the Wagon | 3/3/1973 | See Source »

...transcript of a panel discussion held at the Crimson Centennial with J. Anthony Lukas, Stephen R. Barnett, Hiller B. Zobel, Sanford J. Ungar, Irvin M. Horowitz, and moderator Alan M. Dershowitz. But with the addition of an op-ed page to the daily paper, we have decided to limit furure Dump Trucks to Harvard-Radcliffe undergraduates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Directions | 2/28/1973 | See Source »

FURTHERMORE, A LIMITED journalist's privilege could, in effect, limit the practice of muckraking journalism to precisely those media organizations which are most susceptible to economic pressure from Washington. The emerging tactic of the Nixon Administration against the free flow of information is not one of the attacking journalists in the courts, but a policy of wooing the businessmen who head media corporations with promises of economic security. This strategy is most evident in the Whitehead bill for Federally-licensed television stations, where local channels are offered longer five-year licenses in exchange for an end to "ideological plugola...

Author: By R. MICHAEL Kaus, | Title: What's So Special About the Press? | 2/28/1973 | See Source »

...only way to limit the journalist's privilege is to discriminate against pamphleteers, maybe the way to save the privilege is not to limit it at all. We might simply be prepared to forego the testimony of those criminals who bothered to establish "sham" newspapers. This seems to be the position taken by Justice William O. Douglas in his dissent in the Caldwell case...

Author: By R. MICHAEL Kaus, | Title: What's So Special About the Press? | 2/28/1973 | See Source »

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