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Word: todays (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Committee on Rights and Responsibilities begins hearings today to investigate cases of students charged with violations of the Resolution of Rights and Responsibilities during the sit-in at Dean May's office...

Author: By Shirley E. Wolman, | Title: Hearings Start Today On Sit-In Punishment | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

...Committee has informed 19 students of charges against them, all arising from complaints originating with May. The first two of these students are scheduled to appear today. Complaints against six more students have been signed by May, but the Committee has not yet mailed letters to these students asking them to appear...

Author: By Shirley E. Wolman, | Title: Hearings Start Today On Sit-In Punishment | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

Harvey Brooks, dean of Engineering and Applied Physics and chairman of the subcommittee which made the two recommendations, will inform President Pusey today of the Research Policy Committee'sdecision. The Corporation will decide, probably this month, how Harvard will be associated with the Project...

Author: By Jeff Magalif, | Title: Policy Committee Reaches Decision On Project Cam | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

...years ago the dispersal strategy seemed radical and daring. Today it is simply impossible. It is clearly repugnant to demands for neighborhood control, to the growing sense of specific community. Prodded by the black power advocates, even liberals have been pushing "community control." Such localism has inevitable racial overtones, which may one day result in intricate warfare. Whether or not it increases the self-reliance of the blacks, in the white areas localism means law-and-order and school segregation. Moynihan ignores these unhappy political realities. To him, the neighborhood-oriented approach is self-defeating if the neighborhoods are human...

Author: By Thomas Geoghegan, | Title: The City Moynihanism | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

...fields-at 50? for 24 bushels. He witnessed bloody horror as a machine gunner in World War I. Afterward, he was one of a few who helped organize a farm workers' union when the bad times came. Despite the union, the economic gap between landowner and laborer today in Akenfield is about what it was in Victorian times. With land prices above ?300 an acre, a man on wages has no hope of ever saving enough to buy a place of his own. The simple result is a drift away from the land to the factories, a drift, (unlike...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A World Well Lost | 11/28/1969 | See Source »

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