Word: responded
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...they are always ready to respond to an undergraduate who seeks than out. College officials have sherry and dinner parties to which undergraduates are invited, and the tutors give extra tutorials to those who ask. Further, the tutor is on the side of his pupils against the Examiners; he doesn't turn in a grade, as at Harvard...
...indicated faults and weaknesses of their methodologies and services." Addressing the convention next day, FCC Chairman Newton Minow told the broadcasters he hoped the hearings "may encourage you to put more trust in the people and more faith in your own judgments of the public's capacity to respond to the best that is in you. I should hope that sometimes you would cancel the ratings and keep the programs. It's not accuracy I'm particularly worried about. I just don't think it's the function of broadcasters simply to count eyeballs...
...Monro act as if Harvard students are a legitimate captive market, property of HSA. Mr. Monro refers to what I would call free competition by saying "students from another college have sought to cut in." This is appropriate language for a Director of HSA, who is supposed to respond by improving the quality of his service or his product. It seems inappropriate for the Dean of Harvard College. I resent Mr. Burke's even attempting to use the University's rules to prevent delivery of birthday cakes by a competitor; I resent Mr. Burke's success in using those rules...
...life. Another New Haven cleric rejects the phenomenon as "a gentlemanly fad." Students mostly take a dim view. "My grandmother had her Ouija board," says one. "My mother had her Bridey Murphy. Now they have this. It's all the same to me." The glossolalists expect skepticism, and respond with a rueful joke: "Maybe this is what St. Paul means by being fools for Christ's sake...
...taken by Robert S. McNamara, Ford's decisive president before he became Defense Secretary. Ford executives are still awed by the memory of McNamara. "He is the only true genius I've ever known," says one. But he adds: "His refusal to consider that the consumer would respond emotionally, rather than rationally, has resulted in our weakness today...