Word: subjecting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Corporation has taken note of the action of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences yesterday afternoon in clarifying and expanding its resolution of February 4, 1969 on the subject of the status of ROTC at Harvard. We have already instituted negotiations to carry out the wishes of the Faculty as expressed in their vote of February fourth. As the Faculty has stated, there are other interested faculties whose views are entitled to considerations. Subject to such consideration we now accept the Faculty's clarification vote of April seventeenth and will continue these negotiations adopting the principle that ROTC should become...
...residential housing will include provision for relocating existing tenants similar to those outlined by Dean Ebert in his April 15 statement. Moreover, the University will at the earliest feasible time undertake to replace locations in the Cambridge area and to build other housing for Cambridge residents as we can, subject to the ability to obtain adequate financing from the Federal Government or elsewhere...
...might be argued that both acts, in 1865 and 1967, refer only to officers of Harvard College, and that faculty or administration from other divisions of the University would not be subject to any restrictions. This line of attack will probably not be successful because most references to Harvard by the state name "Harvard College." And the real name of the Corporation is still "President and Fellows of Harvard College...
...faces a frosty reception. The President broached the subject during his February swing around Europe, and was firmly if politely rebuffed. Stans hopes to override European objections by invoking the all-too-likely prospect that Congress may impose compulsory-and much stiffer-textile-import controls in the absence of voluntary restrictions. As Stans warned before leaving Washington, "The task will not be easy." It may well prove impossible. But Stans insists that while "an expansionary trade policy is good for the U.S., it must not be at the price of dismantling one of our major industries...
...Emily Dickinson's inebriate of air and debauchee of dew, stoned on life and art. In answer to the question, "What gods has mankind worshipped?" Dancer Isadora Duncan once replied: "Dionysus - yesterday. Christ - today. After tomorrow, Bacchus at last!" In short she was the quintessential bohemian, the ideal subject for a screen biography. The Loves of Isadora supplies the ideal object: Vanessa Redgrave, whose enactment of Duncan carries with it an exquisite sensitivity and a formidable intelligence...