Word: partially
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...moderate form of progressive income tax. Half of all students, presumably able to afford higher rents, were paying more than $510 a year. They will now be assessed the same amount as those less able to pay. Those on scholarship and a few others will receive full or partial help, but not, as previously, from the higher rents charged to wealthier students...
Such technological changes worry many economists and sociologists. They fear that the unskilled worker, the artisan and the office worker will more and more find their jobs disappearing or changing radically. They see extra leisure for workers as at least a partial answer to the problem, but then they worry about how people will be able to use that extra leisure creatively. Almost everyone agrees that the U.S. is entering what University of California President Clark Kerr calls "the age of the knowledge industry," when men and women of all ages will have to be continuously educated through their lifetimes...
...divert themselves with non-League foes, Brown and Columbia face each other today. The game for some time was expected to be a rather important meeting between Archie Roberts of the Lions and Brown's Jim Dunda. Since Dunda was injured in pre-season drills and will only see partial action today, the game will probably be boring. Columbia will win it, by at least two touchdowns...
...type offense employed by UMass gives Whelchel many opportunities to display his talents. Yovicsin reports that he can pass efficiently from a drop-back, roll-out, or partial roll-out play, and always present the problem of a run option when he rolls out to his strong side...
...doubt about that. Power, who has bucked his bosses often during his career, expressed outright disagreement with the Administration's position on the partial test ban. "The treaty," he told the Senators flatly, "is not in the best interests of the U.S." What bothered Power, said Stennis after the secret hearing, was a gnawing doubt on whether "the U.S. can or would maintain its present undisputed superiority in nuclear power if it ratified the treaty. General Power believes this is the only present deterrent...