Word: sufferred
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Paris K.C. Barclay '78-4, a HRDC member, said yesterday that Brustein's professional and rigorous approach to drama would "scare away" the amateur performers and split drama students into two groups. Career-oriented theater students will be drawn to the Loeb, and House shows and amateur organizations will suffer, Barclay said...
Attendance shouldn't suffer because of the shift either. The same alumni and zamboni-crazed aficionados attend every home game. It should be no different on Commonwealth Ave., especially since transportation accommodations will be provided by 60 Boylston St. (better known as "Bertagna Bus Lines...
...easy one, and women are encountering many of the same problems that have traditionally confronted men. Explains Brigadier General Mary Clarke, commander of the Army's Fort McClellan: "Both the women and the men come from an easygoing civilian life into a regimented environment. They suffer homesickness; they find it hard to get up at 5 a.m. Some of the women have not been accustomed to eating three meals daily and are required to do so here. Thus they tend to gain weight at first. But they are soon in good shape...
...CLOSER to home, we can do a better job of dealing with our own colonial heritage than by celebrating its inception. Despite our best efforts, Native Americans have survived. Like other minorities (including blacks, who suffered the consequences of slavery, another American "mistake"), they continue to face special problems. American Indians have a significantly lower life expectancy and a higher infant mortality rate than the U.S. population at large. They suffer the economic exploitation of the giant energy companies, who seek the vast quantities of coal and uranium buried underneath the remaining Indian land. Indian workers, for example, have been...
...good. Yet many lawyers are concerned that the dignity of their profession, as well as the quality of legal services generally, will suffer if fast-food techniques are applied to the law. As Goodman, a trustee of the Los Angeles County Bar, notes: "In a fast-food operation, every hamburger is alike. But in law, every case is not. When you walk in and order a hamburger, they don't tell you, 'Try yogurt, it's healthier.' They just serve you the hamburger that everybody else gets." Several local attorneys simply fear The Law Store...