Word: suppressions
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...that as it may, Kissinger's request of November would have been an outright insult to any reporter. Such requests are always mandatory before-not after-the fact, and are appropriate only in the case of private conversations, not general pronouncements. In effect, Kissinger was trying to suppress what legitimately belonged in the public domain...
...classic, "The Fiery Vchemence." With the 17 proposals for educational innovation in the open letter below, we are asking you, Faculty and students, to have "the moral strength to refuse." to refuse to perpetuate any longer a hierarchical system which dispenses its elite distinctions according to how thoroughly you suppress your emotional life, how competitively hostile you can be, how completely dependent on, and disciplined by, the system you are. We ask that you refuse to continue repressing your frustrations with this place while waiting for that ultimate consumer good: the Harvard degree. It is absolutely vital that we realize...
...Kent State killings made plain last year, the state governments have perhaps more extraordinary power over life and limb. Thirty-five state constitutions explicitly authorize the governor, at his own discretion, to call out the National Guard to suppress insurrection. They define this discretion broadly enough to cover the use of the Guard in any public disorder attended by a crisis in local law enforcement...
...approved for clinical use in Argentina, isoprinosine is under test at 15 institutions in the U.S. Gordon believes it could some day have tremendous impact on disease treatment. Unlike drugs that merely suppress the symptoms of viral disease, isoprinosine attacks the viruses themselves, preventing them from reproducing and thus reducing the scope of infection. So far, says Gordon, it has proved effective in tissue culture against the viruses that cause influenza and the herpes viruses responsible for shingles and chicken pox. But it still falls short of cure for man's most common ailment, for, as Gordon points...
BOSTON'S School Committee spent much of this winter trying to suppress student strikes and to lower a vandalism rate which cost them 500,000 dollars last year. After five hundred students staged a walk-out from a Dorchester high school February 4, Chairman of the School Committee Paul Tierney (Louise Day Hicks' successor), citing a "national conspiracy to disrupt and destroy the public school system," sent uniformed and plainclothes policemen into four Boston high schools to prevent arson and keep non-students out of the buildings. He said the conspiracy was made up of "extremists, the Progressive Labor Party...