Word: maintains
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...free fifth course, and experimenting with ungraded courses as were being tried at Princeton and Brown. Someone, on one of those Friday afternoons, suggested combining the two ideas in a proposal to allow students to take a free fifth course on a pass-fail basis. This combination, some members maintain, was the first mistake...
...supervision of the operation can be understood in two ways. First of all, it is possible to argue that her personal attention is required, Radcliffe's financial condition being as precarious as it is. Those who would espouse this line maintain that all details of the operation of the College must be watched and economies applied unsparingly. This, they say, has been Mrs. Bunting's role...
...chamber-sized group, usually performing music suited to its dimensions and wisely refraining from competing with the much larger HRO on its own terms. Nonetheless, it does have to draw from the same pool of musicians and attempt to attract the same audience, and is constantly struggling to maintain itself alongside the more prestigious HRO. When the HRO is up, the BSO is down and vice versa. Since the advent of James Yannatos as conductor of the HRO, the Bach Society has had to play underdog...
...serve in government and outside of it, who move back and forth, do so, it seems to me, for two basic reasons. One, to maintain independence. If you have worked in more than one locus successfully, if you have more than one professional home, so to speak, you are not solely dependent on your current job to survive. You don't depend unwhole-somely on that one boss, on that next efficiency report, or on defending the status quo of that one department or agency. You can quit tomorrow if you want or need to, with a place...
...aimed at protecting privacy, not property. Over a hot dissent by Justice William O. Douglas,* who predicted police abuse, Brennan suggested that the mere-evidence rule did not protect privacy-and it surely prevented police from using the fruits of a reasonable search. Even so, Brennan warned police to maintain Fourth Amendment standards in the seizure of evidence: "Probable cause must be examined in terms of cause to believe that the evidence sought will aid in a particular apprehension or conviction." At the same time, he reassured prosecutors and police that the Supreme Court has not forgotten that "government...