Word: mained
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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According to Morgenthau, the Council has declined because the great powers have been unable to act in unison when their divergent interests were at stake. In addition, the main threat to peace and security emanates from these nations. Morgenthau explained that the actual transformation of the Assembly into the dominant agency of the U.N. was possible only because the U.S., until 1956, was able to round up the support of a two-thirds majority...
None of the speakers elicited much enthusiasm from the audience; perhaps none intended to. Charles Coryell, professor of Chemistry at M.I.T., and Gov. G. Mennen Williams of Michigan seemed to provoke the audience most. But Coryell's defense of Linus Pauling was, in context, peripheral to the main topic, and Williams' six-point program for "what you can do" turned out to be largely a program for what a Democratic Administration might do. Save for his emphasis on "arms to parley," though, Williams' speech seemed to encourage the audience, to show them that there are important politicians on their side...
...University is also anxious to avoid any arrangement which would cause a constant lines of buses on Massachusetts Avenue, thus blocking one of the main entrances to the Yard...
...Image. Lott's main problem in early campaigning was his dullness. Stolid and rigid, with cold blue eyes and a piping voice that made him sound slightly ridiculous, he left his audiences unimpressed. In midcampaign, however, he switched tactics. He struggled to lower his voice a few notes, assumed the role of a wise parent, and at the same time began pepping up his campaign with vicious personal attacks on Quadros. He called Quadros everything from insane to dictatorial, said that Quadros' election would lead to bloody civil war, charged that Quadros was trying to buy the election...
Casting Problem. The film will deal with only ten years of Freud's life, the early era of professional discovery, and center on three main characters: Freud; his teacher, Dr. Josef Breuer; and an attractive young patient called Cecilie, a part drawn from the histories of several early Freud patients but mainly from the famed Anna O., a patient of Breuer's in whose case Freud became interested. She liked to talk about her symptoms because somehow that relieved her. Anna O. described the process as "chimney sweeping"; for Freud it was the foundation of the concept...