Word: coding
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...estimate is refreshing and is a true picture. This article should help to focus the eyes of thinking people on the importance of stimulating the move to eliminate racial discrimination and as the first and most important step to abolish segregation which is maintained by an outrageous and outmoded code of laws in most of the Southern states...
Skills & Shortfalls. Engine Charlie Wilson was bringing to Washington precisely what Dwight Eisenhower had asked for: the core of the philosophy of U.S. business, to be adapted to management of "the largest business in the world." It was not a saintly code, but it did combine the world's greatest managerial skill with patriotism, unpretentiousness, and the kind of dogged self-confidence necessary to practical achievement. But, in walking with the firm tread of a successful industrialist, Charlie Wilson exposed an Achilles' heel which Eisenhower had hardly bargained for: Wilson did not understand the motives or workings...
...that Oatis was convicted of violating could be used to send any newsman to jail at the whim of the Reds. Says the Czech law and penal code: "He who attempts to obtain state secrets with the intention of betraying them to a foreign power [is guilty of espionage] . . . By a state secret is meant a fact [of] political, military or economic interest [which] should remain concealed . . . By economic secret is meant everything . . . important for economic enterprise . . . that should be kept secret." In short, Oatis was guilty of espionage if he tried to check the location or output...
...once sawed up all the chairs in his wife's bedroom while the poor woman lay in bed in one of her confinements. But to Biographer Lane, the real villains in the Brontë story are a harsh climate, medical ignorance about tuberculosis, and a repressive moral code which forced the imaginative Brontë girls into erotic fantasies...
Members of the Harvard Alumni Com- mittee on Athletics, according to the Boston Herald, also asserted flatly last week that Harvard had no intention of withdrawing from the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The Herald article, however, which carried no names, made it clear that neither the television code nor Harvard's status in the NCAA were discussed at the last meeting of the Alumni Association...