Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Visiting Committee -- making its annual report to the Overseers -- also heard complaints and proposals for reform from Design School students. "Good intentions are no longer enough" to deal with the School's problems, one architecture student told the 29 committee members and more than 100 faculty members and students...
...whole section of the report that deals with marijuana is loaded: "Ideas are rapid, disconnected, and uncontrollable ... At other times there may be a 'down' with moodiness, fear of death, and panic .... Space may seem expanded, the head may feel swollen and extremities..." That sounds to me more like one martini to many...
...bandwagon just doesn't sell. Statements like those of Farnsworth and Prout do nothing but stroke the sentiments of the elderly and further alienate the young. There are some very good reasons why college students should avoid the drug scenes that so seductively beckon, but the authors of this report haven't managed to touch on one of them. A remarkable achievement. Bruce Jackson Junior Fellow
Training is not long or extensive. New officers get on the job instruction for a month, working in each area with an experienced man. They receive limited instruction in arrest procedures, testifying in court, report writing and gun-handling, but most emphasis is placed on learning first aid techniques. Twenty-seven men, however, are voluntarily taking a course in Criminal Law and Investigation taught by a professor from the College of Criminal Law at North-eastern...
Humphrey Doermann's report on CIA financing gave the University a clean bill of health--almost. Doermann, assigned by Dean Ford to investigate possible CIA influence, told the Faculty Tuesday that Central Intelligence Agency "conduit" foundations have channeled $456,000 into the University from 1960 to 1966. Conduit foundations, unlike so-called "dummy" organizations, do not receive all their money from the CIA, and therefore there is no proof that the agency's dollars actually went to the University. There were no strings attached to the aid, so the government could not directly influence research or prevent its results from...