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Realistic Fact. Harvard Jurisdictional Expert Paul Bator disagrees vigorously. He concedes the President's firing power but adds, "There is no reason why the mere existence of this power, unexercised, should render the suit non-justiciable ... For years, different agencies of the United States have taken different positions in the same lawsuit." For example, the Supreme Court once decided a case that was originally called United States v. United States.* The reason such suits can be maintained, says Bator, is the realistic fact that "the Government does not have to be conceived as a single, indivisible entity." Another...
...half the human race vs. the other half. There is no place at this University for decision-making processes which are based on other than facts, reason and good-will. I remain myopic regarding the processes by which politics, fear, ambivalence, and self-serving motives cloud issues, and render decision-making procedures impotent, laborious and prey to error. History, ipso facto, mandates this view. Is it to be ruled out that a University, wherein thinking people have collected to reason together--given ready access to accumulated knowledge--cannot apply that knowledge and overcome the mistakes of the past...
...effort to eliminate field goal kickers' domination of the sport, the National Football League instituted two rule revisions Thursday which will render the field goal virtually obsolete...
...Xerox Corp. has grown to wealth and prominence by making it relatively easy and inexpensive to copy almost anything. Yet for the past decade, researchers at the company's Webster, N.Y., laboratories have been trying to find a way to render documents invisible to the luminescent eye of a Xerox machine. That seemingly suicidal quest was prompted by a growing clamor from publishers of copyrighted material who are angry about unlawful pirating of their works-and by Government nervousness about dissidents leaking xerographic evidence of federal mischief to the public (read Jack Anderson...
Xerox now has finally come up with an anti-Xerox weapon: a combination of fluorescent dyes that can render a piece of paper uncopiable. The dyes, which can be sprayed on a document from an aerosol can, are invisible until hit by the powerful light of a Xerox machine. Then they fluoresce with a bright flash that makes the copy momentarily illegible. After copies of a document had been distributed to all those authorized to see it, the original and the copies could be sprayed with the dyes so that attempts to make additional, unauthorized copies would produce only blank...