Word: supportively
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...What the real estate industry can do is to build housing units, because developers and contractors have done it over and over again, and have expertise at it. The industry also has access to private mortgage money, which is required because there simply is not enough public money to support an adequate rate of construction. To be able to tap that expertise and those financial resources, we must pay the costs--in the form of fees, profits, or tax incentives to private builders. There are Federal and State programs to do that, and they involve the cooperation of City...
...elderly on small, fixed incomes, for large families and families with limited incomes who cannot pay the price the market must charge. But as I have noted, there is a limit to the amount of new construction that land in Cambridge, developed to its highest tolerable density, can support. Not everyone can live here; there will inevitably have to be hard choices made. There is no choice to be made for or against a 'free" market; no market in a just society has ever been free to abuse the people it serves. And I will declare now, as a matter...
...measure which seemed to have the best chance of passage was relatively mild compared to some of the measures in bills introduced. This bill--introduced by Rep. John N. Erlenborn (R.-Ill.) and strongly supported by Rep. Green as an alternative to more stronger bills--would have required any colleges recelving federal funds to file with the Commissioner of Education its rules for on-ampus behavior and the maintenance of order. In an effort to gain more support, it was later amended so that colleges would only have to draw up such rules, and show them to the commissioner...
...report acknowledged that larger social problems such as the Vietnam war and the condition of urban American were important factors leading to college disturbances. The Congressmen--two of whom spent some days at Harvard interviewing students. Faculty and Administrators--also voiced strong support for what has come to be known as "university restructuring," to increase the responsiveness of universities to student concerns. The report, which was released just before hearings on the Erlenborn bill began, probably helped to swing some Republican Congressmen on the Green subcommittee against the bill...
...cops would probably come, so the situation would cease to be humorous, and your means would be dwarfed by the enemy's means. Besides, the demands were just--I was convinced even then that they were just--and since the occupation would take place in any case, why not support it while using it for your own purposes...