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Word: implicit (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...October Comment attempts to "go some way toward particularizing the blanket charges of the glib critics who delight in vilifying 'the press.'" It fails in this attempt, mainly because its contributors are unable or unwilling to take firm hold of the issues implicit in their own material...

Author: By Josiah LEE Auspitz, | Title: Comment | 10/30/1961 | See Source »

Nevertheless, such acceptance, with its implicit retreat from the ultimate, long-maintained U.S. goal of German reunification, would undoubtedly be a serious blow to West German morale and allegiance, possibly a strain on the West European alliance, and at least a limited cold-war victory for the Russians. Realism surely demands to know what the U.S. would be getting in return...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cold War: What Is Realism? | 10/6/1961 | See Source »

...spring of 1958, an article by William W. Bartley III '56 set off what is probably history's most famous Crimson-caused debate. Writing on religion at Harvard, Bartley unearthed the fact that the Rev. George A. Buttrick, Preacher to the University, had enforced (with President Pusey's implicit support) a standing order barring Jewish marriages in Memorial Church. This led to widespread and often heated debate over the nature of Memorial Church and over the question of whether Harvard was a sectarian or secular university...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cambridge's Only Breakfast Table Daily | 10/6/1961 | See Source »

...Implicit in the change of plan is the fact that the School will eventually be able to move further into Radcliffe territory. The Radcliffe News Office reported that the Education School has options on Radcliffe land adjacent to the tract it has purchased...

Author: By Jonathan D. Trobe, | Title: School of Education Plans to Move To Site at Radcliffe Quadrangle | 9/27/1961 | See Source »

...Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher...

Author: By Arnold R. Isaacs, | Title: What's Happening to the Peace Corps? | 4/28/1961 | See Source »

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