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...measure my practice spits without a tape." For a month before a big contest, he spits for about two hours a day, fixing his eyes, his head, his entire body on target before he lets fly a practice shot. Unlike others, he uses hardly any body thrust...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: American Scene: The 16th Annual Tobacco Spit-Off | 8/17/1970 | See Source »

...thrust of the radical critique is to expose the University as a class institution, and to crack the facade of neutrality and disinterestedness which the heads of the University must maintain...

Author: By Cheney Ryan, | Title: The University and Repression | 8/14/1970 | See Source »

...slower pace and with greater care than in previous years, but it certainly did not try to tear down what the Warren Court accomplished," says Stanford Law Professor Gerald Gunther. The Burger Court, in fact, modestly extended the pioneering doctrines of the Warren Court in several areas. The historic thrust of the Warren Court to desegregate public schools was advanced last October when the Burger Court unanimously ordered southern school districts to desegregate "at once" -a sharp rebuke to the Nixon Administration's earlier efforts to ease desegregation pressures on the South...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Supreme Court: Year of the Pause | 7/13/1970 | See Source »

...five years and waded through 3,700 federal land enactments, has delivered a report that is at best a mixed blessing. Some of its ideas, such as the creation of a new Department of Natural Resources to consolidate the administration of all public lands, are excellent. But the main thrust of the report is a compromise between two conflicting policies. The commission urges greater exploitation of federal lands for commercial use, while simultaneously paying homage to environmental preservation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Capitalism v. Conservation | 7/6/1970 | See Source »

...THRUST of these essays is to redefine pluralism, the oft-invoked rationale for inaction or moderate quiescence, as a disruptive and revolutionary force. Pluralism makes for moral havoc. It means that the state, especially the liberal state, is not the most important arena of ethical life. Parties, sects, and unions have the kind of autonomy which can enjoin members disobedience to the state. With admirable balance. Walzer fleshes out the competing obligations-to the group as a whole, to the other members, to ideals. to civility, and sometimes to revolutionary violence...

Author: By Thomas Geoghegan, | Title: Books Walzer's Obligations | 7/2/1970 | See Source »

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