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Several ROTC cadets revealed that they had testified before the CEP to ask that ROTC be retained at Harvard. The cadets said that ROTC courses" and that getting rid of courses" and that getting rid of courses" and that getting rid of ROTC would restrict students' freedom of choice. Meanwhile, the HUC drew together a panel for an open meeting on ROTC late in the week. Representatives of several ROTC standpoints--including Dean Ford, Rogers Albritton of the SFAC, James Q. Wilson of the CEP, and Hilary Putnam--all agreed to talk on the panel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 'Paine Hall' Made Headlines... | 6/12/1969 | See Source »

...objecting to Federal student aid is that parts of it are subject to the so-called anti-riot clauses, which stipulate that funds shall be denied to students who use unlawful tactics. I think these stipulations are inappropriate. Nevertheless it is important to note that the law does not restrict freedom of thought, dissent or speech. Moreover, discretion to deny the funds has been left with the University. So far as I know, no such denials have been made...

Author: By Bruce VAN Wyk, | Title: Federal Involvement in the Universities: A Reply to James Glassman | 6/9/1969 | See Source »

...persons, a covert yet stubborn resistance to any genuine movement of blind people from the agency back into the mainstream of community life." Although such public distaste is deep, Scott says, the agencies have made few educational efforts to change it. He also contends that the agencies tend to restrict their services to those blind people whom the public finds most acceptable: children with no other handicaps and employable adults. The result is that even the occasional benefits of agency programs are generally not available to such groups as women and the elderly, who make up roughly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Social Services: Blind Men Are Made | 5/23/1969 | See Source »

...Social Anthropology and head of Soc Rel 149, would not make a definite statement about whether he intended to continue the course next year. He called the three-member supervisory group, " a sort of snoop committee," and charged that the committee was one of several efforts being made to restrict and repress the course...

Author: By Ronald H. Janis, | Title: Dept. Will Retain Soc Rel 148, 149 | 5/23/1969 | See Source »

...alphabet-minded Washington dubbed it. It would place a 50% ceiling on the amount of a taxpayer's income above $10,000 that is eligible for favored treatment. Income would have to include the appreciated value of property donated to charity, and the ceiling would restrict the amount of deductions that a taxpayer could take for 1) oil-depletion allowances and intangible drilling costs, 2) excessive farm losses, and 3) rapid depreciation of real estate holdings. Nixon would also require taxpayers with more than $10,000 of tax-preferred income (including long-term capital gains) to allocate itemized nonbusiness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NIXON'S TAX PACKAGE: A MODEST START ON REFORM | 5/2/1969 | See Source »

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