Word: steps
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...ties because of overconcern with its transpacific interests. Far from it. The Administration is only too well aware of Europe's problems -and only too eager to resolve those that affect the U.S. The Vice President's voyage of rediscovery was an important first step in Washington's effort...
...Harvard Athletic Council's proposal this week to remove "Games Undesirable Tension" was a step fully as farsighted as any innovation proposed at Harvard this year. While the Faculty Committee has only just begun what should be a lengthy study, this is as good a time as any to examine a plan that will revolutionize intercollegiate athletics...
...scheme is perhaps the first step toward the fulfillment of the true athletic philosophy: It's not who wins that matters, but how you play the game. In addition, there are immediate practical benefits. For instance, there are thousands of Harvard alumni in California who never get to see their basketball team play. A game at U.C.L.A. would provide long-desired West-Coast exposure, but up to now the embarrassment of a score like 110-28 blotting the Crimson ledger has outweighed the advantages. And with its Boston Irish-surroundings, Harvard has always been considered a "natural" football opponent...
...Lleras Restrepo when the violence broke out, was still cooling its collective heels in Bogota's Continental Hotel waiting to see the President. The Russians seem to have almost infinite patience. Throughout Latin America, on which they have long cast covetous eyes, they are intensifying their efforts to step up trade and diplomatic relations...
...Pays? Next the Federal Government is preparing to step in. After a year's study, Interior Secretary Stewart Udall will present President Johnson with his recommendations for federal legislation in May. His chief dilemma: who should pay to reclaim orphaned "spoil banks"-land that was stripped before there were any laws by miners who are no longer around. The Interior Department estimates that there are some 800,000 acres of barren, orphaned land in the twelve-state Appalachia region alone, pegs the cost of reclaiming them at $250 million...