Word: savely
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...timing of his entry into the race was proof to many that Kennedy had been slyly scheming all along, waiting for someone else to do his dirty work. His argument that an earlier challenge would have been interpreted as merely anti-L.B.J. animus did not save him from being colored ruthless and opportunistic once again. Even Arthur Schlesinger Jr. felt obliged to write a defensive article conceding that Kennedys "always do these things badly...
...though the Committee demonstrates the myth of Harvard's uniqueness and says "there's no turning the clock back," it implies that only the intangible aura of the community can save the University's standards of excellent. The chapter on The Harvard Community concludes with the vague but pregnant advice: "It is appropriate to ask whether it lies within its power to make Cambridge a more attractive setting for life as well as for work. . . . By providing a milieu encouraging to the development of a variety of subcommittees it could widen the options for involvement open to the Faculty...
...lead right away, tiring himself by fighting for it if he has to or staying in front all the way if he does not. The more early speed there is in a race, the better it is for the come-from-behind horses like Dancer's Image who save ground and energy by running far back along the rail until they start to race in earnest for home. For pace handicapping, the Derby field was a textbook case. Forward Pass fought all the way with two speed demons named Kemucky Sherry and Captain's Gig, clearing the way for Dancer...
...yesterday the students of Calvin Coolidge College took to the streets. They paraded up and down in front of the 45 Mount Vernon Street offices with placards urging that Calvin Coolidge College be retained. They came with a plan to save the college and, by asking for $10 from each of the school's 100 students, hired a lawyer who will move against the Trustees in the event of a phase-out. The plan to save the college, which has the endorsement of the college's dean, involves affiliating with Newton's Mount Ida Junior College. The chief stumbling block...
Obviously the students want to save the college since, as one of them put it, "a degree from a place that closed up isn't worth much." Coolidge's Dean Goodnow has other reasons for wanting to keep the college going. "Affiliation with Mt. Ida," he says, "would give us some of the facilities we need in order to begin thinking about accreditation." Goodnow, who became dean in 1965, also believes the school is becoming somewhat better. "In light of our actual standing in the academic community--which is almost no standing at all--we're getting people into graduate...