Word: within
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Harrison's offense pressures the opposition. Saturday, most of the Harvard baskets came from within five feet of the basket on breaks, give-and-go's and rebound...
...doubt that many coeds had that sort of student power in mind when they decided to share themselves with Yale for one week. Although there were innumerable efforts to make it respectable by scheduling coeducational panel discussions with titles like, "Educational Innovation: Is It Possible Within The Present University Structure?" and "Exploitation In Ghetto Real-Estate Transactions," we all knew why we were there, and they all knew why we were there and we didn't need any panel discussions to help us along...
...student host was not happy to be a student host. He made it clear to me within ten minutes of our meeting that he had only volunteered his room because everyone else on his corridor had and he had been subject to some "pressure" and, besides, he had Law Boards on Saturday and he didn't like being dislocated before a test like that, and he hoped I didn't mind but he was going to take his radio and alarm clock with him when he left. He also let me know he intended to stay in his room...
THERE IS NO tenable parallel, as has been suggested, between the rights of students and of the military to form organizations on campus. Student groups are wholly within the control of people at Harvard, and these groups have the freedom to act and to represent themselves as their members see fit. But military organizations here are entirely controlled outside; they are simply not a part of Harvard, and have no right to represent themselves as though they were. If the personnel department of General Motors proposed a plan by which it would form a permanent recruiting organization within Harvard with...
...probably would--would the supporters of the HUC-SFAC proposals continue to support Harvard students' right to have ROTC on campus, at the price of abandoning their plans for reform? Or would they, as seems more likely, be willing to admit that the "right" to receive military training within the framework of the university is not quite so fundamental as they had once believed...