Word: followings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Lines Deleted. "You stated . . . that you thought there was a great likelihood that the adoption of General MacArthur's policy would result in greater losses in Korea than to follow the present policy...
...himself thinks in terms of more recent history. "Mussolini," he once said, "was the greatest man of our century, but he committed certain disastrous errors. I, who have the advantage of his precedent before me, shall follow in his footsteps but also avoid his mistakes." On the record so far, Perón has done just that. His regime has the authoritarian marks-extreme nationalism, the leader principle, an all-powerful state, a militant single party, intolerance of opposition and retention of the form of democracy without any of ts substance. But the Peróns have not yet followed...
...follow such a course of action would make impossible the unity required in the extremely difficult matter of rearming Europe . . . If the free world is to remain free and secure, it must be united...
...move, then, followed a pattern which has been evident for some time now. This pattern includes the recent reorganization of the Overseer's Visiting Committee on the Regulation of Athletic Sports, and the revitalization of the Alumni's Schools Committees. Twenty-two winter speeches at sundry affairs by football coach Lloyd Jordan, and the weekly Harvard Club-sponsored visits of prospective students to Cambridge also follow in the new setup...
Director James Bolle wisely presented the program in reverse chronological order, so that the more accessible pieces would be played first. Neither the Buxtehude nor the Schein works are particularly startling, and they put the audience in a receptive mood for what was to follow. A good part of the credit must go to soprano Faith Barnett, whose crystal-clear voice, especially in the higher registers, and sensitive phrasing made her the outstanding soloist of the evening...