Word: panels
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...Ordered his Scientific Advisory Committee to convene a panel of experts that will check ways in which the Soviet Union might secretly have conducted nuclear tests without detection and what specific progress in weapons technology could have been made...
Winning applicants, chosen by a panel of local citizens, were rated by a simple point system: financial need, 55; school standing, 35; leadership qualities, 5; self-employment, 5. Loans ranged from $100 to $1,000, were made repayable whenever the recipient could raise the money, creating a revolving fund to finance more scholarships. "Our program." said Fradkin last week, "aims to give scholarship money to more students instead of having the top students walk off with all the awards...
Enter Goldberg. With negotiations at a dead stall, Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg sailed in with basically the same idea that he had used to settle two other transportation strikes this year: let both sides "voluntarily" resume work for 60 days while a three-man presidential fact-finding panel sieves the issues and submits nonbinding recommendations. Plainly this was an attempt by former Union Lawyer Goldberg to avoid taking an alternative route that he dislikes-a Taft-Hartley law injunction that would oblige the seamen to return to work for 80 days...
Four University Symposia Wednesday morning will present panel discussions by Faculty members and distinguished alumni on science, journalism, drama, and American foreign policy. Among the panel members will be George B. Kistiakowsky, Abbot and James Lawrence Professor of Chemistry and former scientific adviser to President Eisenhower; Arthur A. Ballantine, Jr., Joseph Pulitzer, Jr., and Phillip S. Weld, all members of the Class of 1936 and prominent journalists; and McGeorge Bundy, former Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and special assistant to President Kennedy for National Security Affairs...
During that time, one of those mysterious underground (or as Miller would put it, "Chthonian") movements has been rumbling about the name and personality of Henry Miller, and a committee-sized panel of names has been assembled by the publishers to "welcome Miller among the elect." The encomiums range in warmth and weight from T. S. Eliot to Kenneth Patchen. He is not only the Buddha of the beatniks, but Lawrence Durrell asserts that ''American literature today begins and ends with the meaning of what he has done." He has been called, or called himself a "saint." "Caliban...