Word: resulting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Economics Department wants only to teach students about the types of problems economists face and the branches of economics that deal with those problems. As a result, course offerings are mainly concerned with such problems as International Economics Relations (Ec 148) and Economic Development and Underdevelopment (Ec 108). This leaves little room for regional economic studies...
...this question of student interest that the Economies Department appears to be overlooking. What courses are offered in a given year is the result of which professors the Department appoints to teaching positions. "The first thing we look for is top quality," Caves explains, "and we are also interested in a balanced approach for the field. If there are suitable persons, then we certainly would explore putting in a course (related to black Africa...
...desired from the classical constraints of his innate sense of line. With a rag he was able to wipe away ink and compose in broad spaces. Privately modeling in this medium, as in the sculpture, Degas was able to counterbalance his draughtsmanship and realize form and volume. Publicly, the result was the marvelously transitory, captured, psychological quality of his work. This sense of spontaneity made him among the first to utilize in his paintings the nature of the then infant process of photography...
...most of the principals are equal to the task. As an ensemble, they share only one common fault, perhaps an inevitable consequence of the production's drive for lucidity: at one time or another, most of the actors show a tendency to declaim rather than converse. As a result, the overall pacing of dialogue is sometimes slowed, and an occasional moment of insight or laughter is dimmed by pretentious delivery. Far more often, however, the line readings succeed in translating Shaw's stylized dialogue exchanges into natural and convincing scenes...
Secondly, the willingness of Senator Kennedy '48, to accept support from Robert McNamara indicates, to put it mildly, that he does not understand the basis of opposition to American foreign policy. The War in Vietnam is not the result of the demonic malevolence of Lyndon Johnson, Dean Rusk, and Walt Rostow (all, incidentally, selected by John F. Kennedy '40), but follows quite directly from the policies pursued by the first Kennedy Administration. There is no confidence that a new Kennedy Administration would not feature the return to office of many men, of whom McNamara is only one, whose views...