Word: implicitly
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With the Senate confirmation last week of Attorney General Elliot Richardson and the implicit approval of his chosen special prosecutor, Archibald Cox, the stage is set for an all-out pursuit of the guilty: Democrat Cox, an aggressive Solicitor General in the Kennedy Administration, declared in Richardson's presence that he did not intend to "shield anybody, and I don't intend to be intimidated by anybody...
...Houses are not merely inequitably run, they are poorly run. President Bok has shown an interest in limiting the tenure of House Masters. This idea carries with it an implicit limitation on Masters' prerogatives. The time has come for a more radical redefinition of the Master's role, for moderating his powers, and for increasing the importance of students, House staff and the central administration in making decisions affecting House life; these changes might improve the quality of House life a little...
...Implicit in an improved interaction between providers and consumers of medical care is the right to respect. Medicine is a profession of service, but to many people it seems to serve only itself. Patients fall at the bottom of the hierarchy. To change this, we have to bring providers and consumers together outside of the treatment area, and get them to talk to one another. Both sides need consciousness-raising. No changes are made by putting one side or the other consistently on the defensive. Starting to talk over issues of importance, as our Consumer's Council has begun...
...genre disappeared after World War II because the class structure mirrored in the play came to an end with that event. Implicit in the play is a great divide between superiors and inferiors, patricians and plebeians. However they err, the patricians are sanctified by wealth, birth and breeding. Whether they are openly envious or openly critical, the plebeians are content or resigned to being maids, manicurists or powder-room attendants. From the vantage point of 1973, one of the fascinations of The Women is that it is positively class-ridden...
...dichotomies and contradictions implicit in the practice of medicine are numerous. The nature of medicine is two-fold: the science and the art coexist. The doctor's relationship with his patient is of a dual character. As Plato suggests, the physician is a friend to his patient as both a technophile (friend of medicine) and an anthropophile (friend of man). We seek an answer to the contradicitions in the physician's oath: Is the doctor foresworn primarily to prolong life or to curtail suffering? Is he bound primarily to a legal code or his own conscience? Furthermore, the sacred...