Word: reminder
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...should now remind ourselves that at bedrock Harvard College is an academic experience... Harvard College is not a 'T' group. It is not an 'encounter group.' it is not the Urban League or Common Cause.' It has something of all of this, and we are the richer for it. But fundamentally it is a place where one's mind is trained and stretched in the presence of peers and faculty who encourage, guide-and at times even inspire," the report says...
...will have to speak out loud and clear. It may be that the only way we can slow or stop this illegal march to a world war is to start impeachment proceedings against the President, in which case we should start without delay. To do so might at least remind him that he is an elected public servant, sworn to uphold the Constitution he daily subverts, and not an anointed Monarch...
...protested the steam baths he was upbraided by former Sergeant Major William Woolridge, the Army's top noncom and one of six sergeants indicted for service club infractions. Woolridge menacingly asked St. Martin: "Don't you know you can get hurt?" St. Martin replied: "Let me remind you a major still outranks a sergeant." Not always. St. Martin is now executive officer of the armed forces induction center in Newark, N.J.-hardly the kind of assignment designed to further a career...
Shouldering Blame. The Epstein article stirred some self-examination that served to remind newsmen that they can never be too careful. In taking itself to task, the Post filed only a mild demurrer "concerning Mr. Epstein's presentation of his case and his manner of quoting." The Times dutifully mentioned Epstein's indictment, but in a story that was buried deep in a bulging Sunday edition. The Washington Star, which was not even among those accused by Epstein, ran an editorial that noted its own care not to use Garry's figure without attribution, complimented the Post...
...SCRIPT is not flawed with too many of these self-indulgent gimmicks, and for that reason, Orton deserves praise for his cleverness in handling gruesome material; especially his use of double-entendres to remind his audience that lust and filthy lucre stand behind every moral platitude. Excessive length and repetitiveness are the major drawbacks Loot has as a play, but a failure of momentum must, inevitably, hobble black comedy unless a compelling basis for suspense gives coherence to the dramatic situation. Case in point: Secret Ceremony, listless, enervated; Pale Fire, taut, compelling...