Word: opened
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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Adams House will offer five discussion groups open to all members of the House, but especially designed for non-Honors students and natural science concentrators. Bernard Crick of the University of London will lead a section on "The Delights and Dangers of Liberalism." He will consider such questions as "how can science flourish in illiberal regimes?" and "why are great poets always anti-liberal...
Dunster will initiate three groups this Fall which will be open to all House members. Robert B. Richardson, Jr. will present "A Literary Approach to non-Literary Subjects." A discussion group led by Arthur N. Holcombe '06, Eaton Professor of the Science of Government, Emeritus, will cover topics in Government for students who have taken courses more advanced than Government...
Touré was happy to accept Peking's offer of a $25 million, no-interest loan. But, already adept at the begging bowl, he was careful not to join in the open attacks on the U.S. or to mention any other Western nation by name when deploring imperialism. To do so would destroy the chance of wangling a bit of Western aid to supplement and offset the swag he had picked up from the eager Communists...
...both papers prosper, and the Tribune and the News become almost even in circulation and quality, John Francis Fitzpatrick died of a heart attack at 73. With characteristic foresight, he had decided years ago on his successor: John W. Gallivan, 45. On Fitzpatrick's death the Tribune, in open defiance of the old man's longstanding order, ran his picture on Page One, thereby providing many subscribers with their first glimpse of the ungregarious Irishman who had greatly altered and immeasurably improved Utah's journalistic landscape...
...demanding that the 285 white students from Grayson be admitted -along with the eight Negroes. The kids raised such a fuss that 1,900 grownups signed similar petitions. Protestant ministers called sharply on the board to act "with respect for every human being and regard for the democratic privileges open to all persons." Faced with such a reaction, the school board hustled lawyers off to Baltimore to ask the U.S. Court of Appeals to stay the integration order. Chief Judge Simon E. Sobeloff refused, and the board had nowhere to go. Result: the kids of Grayson County-white and black...