Word: wisdoms
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...inscription facing Massachusetts Avenue says, "Enter To Grow in Wisdom." And at the same gate, as you leave the Yard: "Depart To Serve better Thy Country and Mankind." In the Yard, grow in wisdom: outside, serve mankind. And at Radcliffe there is talk of surrounding the quadrangle with a wall to buttress as unconfident identity. There will be a gate, and a similar inscription...
...forced to characterized the old College rather uncertainly, as a place which "liberated the young man from the pursuit of money, from hypocrisy, from the control of women. He could grow for a time according t o his nature, and if this growth was not guided by much superior wisdom or deep study, it was not warped by an serious perversion; and if the intellectual world did not permanently entice him... he learned that such things existed, and gathered a shrewd notion of what they could do for a man, and what they might make...
...shed his sympathy for labor. "I'll be honest about it," he says. "It's obvious that any man takes to any job an essential set of attitudes. I have not brainwashed myself." But Arthur Goldberg, a supremely confident man who peers with owlish wisdom from behind horn-rimmed glasses, insists that he can still work with both management and labor with evenhanded justice: "Administrations are for all the people, and labor and management will both be making a mistake if they believe that the Kennedy Administration is going to be pro-labor...
...allegory clanks at every turn of the plot-it needs quite a few more squirts of midnight oil. But as always his actors are excellent, his camera work refined, his script concise and elegantly written. As always his deep-revolving spirit dredges up great gloomy gems of wisdom that flash light from many facets into the heights and depths of life. Among them is one of the first water: "Love shields one from-nothing...
...Does the U.S. Constitution require states to provide public education? Of those who replied, 17 said yes, n no. The court's ruling was based on something more obvious: the state law denied equal protection and circumvented desegregation. Summation of the Louisiana decision, written by Judge John Minor Wisdom, onetime Republican national committeeman appointed to the court by President Eisenhower in 1957: "This is not the moment in history for a state to experiment with ignorance...