Word: sectoral
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Cyprus' current condition, over which he has little control. One year after the coup attempt, there is virtually no prospect for a quick settlement of the Cyprus question-certainly none that would enable the 200,000 Greek-Cypriot refugees to return to their homes in the Turkish-held sector, which they fled during last year's war. Addressing a special session of the Cyprus House of Representatives, Makarios' deputy, Glafkos Clerides, sadly admitted that he did not expect any immediate efforts to put into effect the unanimous U.N. resolution on Cyprus, which calls for the withdrawal...
...Cyprus, the Turkish community last week began to commemorate an anniversary of its own-the July 20 "liberation by the Turkish peace operation" (meaning military invasion) that brought about the island's division. The Turkish sector was ablaze with thousands of bright red Turkish flags unfurled for the occasion. Significantly, no one seemed to be showing any Cyprus flags. That contrasted markedly with the chastened Greeks, who displayed only the flag of the island itself: a gold map of Cyprus encircled by an olive-branch garland on a white background. For the first time ever, the blue-and-white...
Consequently, political prisoners have stemmed from every sector of the Chilean population. Allende's cabinet ministers are in prison. At least 40 lawyers have been detained, many for having exercised their professional duties. Approximately 100 medical doctors were arrested (the majority of them now free), almost invariably accused of participation in "clandestine hospitals" which would have treated pro-Allende casualties in the event of a Civil War. Journalists who worked in pro-Allende newspapers, magazines, radio or television stations have been imprisoned, killed or forced to seek asylum. A similar fate has met all leaders of the now disbanded Central...
...much as now. Derek Bok made clear his anxieties about recent events in the capital in two major addresses this year. The first, his third annual speech to the Overseers in March, was a lengthy speech devoted almost entirely to the prospect of educating professionals in the public sector. Bok cited the failure of federal "Great Society" like programs, rampant inflation, and the "spectacle of corruption in the highest places," as justification for a bolstered public policy program. The speech warned of an increasing incapacity of generalists, or coordinators of specialists in huge bureaucracies, to evaluate and make decisions properly...
...overall program of public sector education, you can't help feeling that there isn't a trade-off being made somewhere, because basically Harvard is educating bureaucrats to be bureaucrats, even if they go back to Washington being better bureaucrats. By the time they leave Harvard they should be well-indoctrinated in the hazards of government interference on the college campus. And with that indoctrination may come Harvard administrators' chances to pay closer attention to what is happening on campus rather than in the capital...