Word: viewings
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...view of the complex issues involved, however, it would be irresponsible for me to try to predict at this time whether or not the Faculty can fully consider and act upon a proposal to reform the grading system before the end of the academic year, since the Faculty has not even seen the proposal in question and since the Faculty is already heavily engaged in working out various other proposals and new programs which other groups of students are eager to have resolved. Dean Bok Dean of the Law School
Your article on "Harvard Family Incomes" is in itself perhaps more a comment on Soc Sci 125 than anything else. Why don't they join Soc Rel 149, which honestly proclaims that they want to view society through a radical perspective? Manipulating figures to support predetermined conclusions is revolting in any course which pretends to be an examination of "The American Economy...
...cannot see the problem that the public imagines the press as an instruction, that it is all the same. If there were a competing partisan press in this country, with contending points of view, then the public would not mistrust the press (certain elements, yes), but the press would not exist as a whole institution. Broder is also very conscious of causing dissension and division within his "lodge" by talking too much about the press. He does, not name names of journalists who "misuse" their power, and his restraint is evident throughout the piece, the same kind of restraint that...
...Harvard to consider the prospect of forceful violation of the academic rights of other students and faculty. Far from recognizing that force tactics might be a response not simply to a few outrageous cases, but rather to the general policy whereby faculty members select courses, instructors, and points of view, without the representation of student opinion, the CRIMSON endorses" this general policy, arguing that "the few bad courses" which result do not justify that dangerous precedent of changing it. I suggest that just as rioters cannot be condemned with complete justification so long as their interests find no adequate voice...
This lonely situation is occasionally relieved when he is asked to talk publicly about his work. If a man is what he does-and that is the American view -how satisfyingly stimulating it is to talk about one's work. The perceptive vigor in much of what 14 novelists have to say for themselves in this book seems to bear out this notion...