Word: exists
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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...University is that the country and the world need more Harvard men. Even if one accepts as fact the need just mentioned, is it not obvious that by expansion the nature of the desired product must be changed, that the Harvard men which the country presumably craves will exist only in the past, that the product turned out on masse will not be the same? The only way in which Harvard's ideals (centering around the individual) can be preserved within education on a large scale is to have many small, independent colleges as at Oxford. As long...
...individuals who had little interest in performing constructive services for the student community. In reference to the particular meeting which prompted the CRIMSON editorial, it is noteworthy that the members of the Students Council present called for a quorum rather than pass resolutions knowing that a quorum did not exist--this last being allowable parliamentary procedure...
...rejected femininity as their mothers inadequately personified it, embraced masculinity as their amiable fathers represented it. Sometime during adolescence, they decided they wanted to be women after all. The resultant conflict, said Jacobson, was expressed by a sense of nasal deformity (even if a serious deformity did not exist), because the women identified their noses with those of their fathers, felt that they were distastefully masculine. Women patients often told Jacobson that their noses "would look better on a man's face"; a few went to considerable lengths to hide their profiles from view. Even among married women, Psychiatrist...
Arthur Koestler's own Western approach to things reveals itself in his complaint that Zen has little to offer to "the moral recovery of Japan." Actually, the concept of morality or immorality, good or evil, does not exist in Zen; enlightenment, rather than making the world a better place to live in, is the goal...
...first scientist Gushchev and Vasiliev interviewed was Aleksandr Nikolaevich Nesmeyanov, president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (TIME cover, June 2 1958) "We must learn to dream," he said. "We do not always care to dream, nor are we always capable of dreaming, but without dreams, prospects do not exist and without dreams man, the scientist included, is halted in his progress...