Word: mortons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...avowed role in what its leaders call "a revolution without frontiers." Although the domino theory has been unfashionable since Viet Nam, it is increasingly apparent that the nations of Central America are vulnerable to a spreading Communist revolution. Even many liberals see this as a danger to the region. Morton Kondracke, the executive editor of the New Republic, last week compared the situation in Central America with what happened in Indochina in 1975 after Congress denied funds to South Viet Nam. He wrote in the Wall Street Journal: "We liberals cannot avert our eyes from what ensued: 3 million murders...
...Morton J. Horwitz 62. Warren Professor of American Legal History, spoke and gave the demonstration his approval to which the students responded by chanting. "Make him dean." Grading classroom participation, Horwitz said, "reflects an authoritarian and repressive view of the educational process...
Arco's surprisingly low prices are beginning to raise questions. Without mentioning the company by name, Morton Winston, the president of Tosco, an independent refiner that has run into cash problems and expects a $40 million first-quarter loss, decried Arco's practices. Said he: "The majors are selling finished products below the costs of the crude required to make them-never mind the refining costs. That is not competition, that is the use or abuse of economic power...
...particularly Harvard, are strongly opposed to the bill and have been successful in securing a conditional amendment exempting universities from the law for 15 years after the bill's passage. Crimson reporter Lavea Brachman interviewed Henry Rosovsky, dean of the Faculty, last week and conducted a roundtable discussion with Morton Bloomfield. Porter Professor of English; James J. Culliton, assistant to the vice president at MIT; and Dr. Thomas H. D. Mahoney, a strong proponent of the bill and former secretary of elder affairs under former Gov. Edward J. King. They discussed the bill's implications for universities...
...take a middle position. It is discrimination, but I can think of more serious types of discrimination.' --Morton Bloomfield