Word: restrictions
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...successful, however, the organizations will have to be allowed the nearly complete freedom they enjoy during the winter. The Dean's office might require that they sketch their programs in advance, but the School should in no way try to restrict their operations. During the past three years Harvard has refused to permit only one program, and that was because it would have led to religious discrimination. Only one speaker, Pete Seeger, has been barred in recent years, and that ill-considered action was reversed after heavy protest. Last spring the University even permitted one of its rooms...
...bushel on most of his wheat, plus "diversion payments'' on the acreage he takes out of wheat production. If the plan fails to get a two-thirds majority, a relatively meager support price of about $1.25 a bushel will be available for growers who voluntarily restrict themselves to assigned acreage quotas. Other farmers will be free to grow as much wheat as they choose without any price-support help at all. Secretary Freeman has repeatedly said that the market price of wheat would fall to $1 a bushel, but his figure is a mere guess. At any rate...
Perhaps laughter or weeping is the only suitable response to such statements. But there may be an important implication. The table of triads presented above is intended to convey a sense of the struggle for satisfaction and fulfilment on numerous levels. James, one can argue, did not wish to restrict his notion of mediation to philosophy alone but visualized it as the very essence of life. Animal, vegetable, human--all must play the game. Indeed, for a man with his background in the life sciences such an extension was quite natural...
...democracy in "the methods and beliefs by which the College selects its natural aristocracy"--the elitism Harvard fosters is "without reference to background on-to race or to religion or to what part of the country you come from." Harvard, he pointed out, has successfully resisted the temptation to restrict itself to any one class or group and instead has made itself representative of every group in the American world...
When the boycott is imposed there must be a clear statement of its purposes and the conditions under which it will be lifted. The reversal of apartheid must include repealing all repressive police legislation. South Africa must abolish the pass laws and the measures dependent on them which restrict the movement, residence, employment, and education of nonwhites. It must allow the functioning of the political movements of nonwhites and must be committed to the gradual extension of political rights to all citizens on the basis of merit not race...