Word: dependables
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...Richard H. Johnson '53 said last night he would make an appointment with the Provost "no discuss the problem at greater length. . .and narrow the disagreement." This, Johnson admitted, was the only "definite decision" made yesterday in a meeting that merely "defined the problem. All future decisions," he continued, "depend on our discussion with the Provost...
Mason, who spoke with Angell during preparation of the report in Washington, said that it was written primarily for countries whose economies depend wholly on a single or small number of raw material exports...
...scientists still work under some special handicaps, heaviest of which is the fact that they cannot freely publish their results. Publication is meat & drink to a scientist; it is the way he normally communicates with his colleagues, the way he wins professional recognition. With this cut off, he must depend on the recognition of a very limited group and on the approval of his administrative bosses of the AEC, most of whom are not scientists. Laboratory morale is good today, but some of the leading U.S. men of science worry about the future, when the AEC may grow...
...long this happy state will continue has some AEC men frankly worried. They feel that the AEC's good relations with its contractors depend on its prestige. They fear that even a whiff of improper political influence will break the spell...
...step, won nearly all of the free world to accept the Japanese Peace Treaty, and thereby handed Communism a stunning diplomatic defeat. But the Japanese Treaty was more a beginning than an end. Whether it became the keystone of a more successful U.S. policy in the Far East would depend on how well U.S.-Japanese relations were handled in the future...