Word: reflecting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...year's freshmen could be told the truth when they apply to Houses. They should learn that Adams, and to a lesser degree Dunster and Lowell, have minimally enforced parietal rules, while Quincy, Eliot, and Leverett and others have quite strictly observed regulations. The uniform rules certainly don't reflect a uniform reality. As long as the rules are not equally enforced, they should be made to fit practice...
...take $10 billion out of circulation in the next fiscal year, easing pressure on interest rates and prices. At that, 1968 would hardly be austere. According to Johnson's projection, the G.N.P. would still rise more than 7%, to about $846 billion. Of the total, about 4% would reflect genuine gains, with the remaining 3% attributable to inflation. Without the tax bill's restraining influence, the Administration believes, these estimates would be thrown off completely...
...Hampshire," Nixon's letter recalled his 14 years of Washington service and the forced retirement that followed his narrow defeat for the presidency in 1960 and his rout in California's 1962 gubernatorial race. During those private years, he wrote, he had had "a chance to reflect on the lessons of public office, to measure the nation's tasks and its problems." "I believe," he concluded, "that I have found some answers...
...many cases, such "inside" information reflects a broker's rationalization, a story confected for customers to account for a swing in paper profits. Or it follows a line laid down by overnight experts-financial writers required to fill columns of type with solemn economic logic to explain short-term market moves that may reflect neither economics nor logic. Too often, day-to-day stock gyrations obscure a basic fact: markets are made and moved over the long haul, not by vague forces but by the conscious decisions of men. The important question is not what makes stocks move...
...appointments reflect Pusey's current interest in relating Harvard's teaching more closely to contemporary social problems. Bok sees a need for the Law School to draw more heavily upon the skills of other departments within the university, then apply their combined knowledge to such issues as racial discrimination, aid to the poor and labor relations. Similarly, Stendahl feels that the Divinity School curriculum should reflect more of the church's concern with the eradication of social ills. By coincidence, Bok and Stendahl are good personal friends and have a common interest in things Swedish...