Word: quarrels
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...have no quarrel with the purposes of General Education. One being the awareness of one's role " . . . as a responsible human being and citizen," the other the restoration of the unity of higher education. The first is not accomplished, and it is to be hoped that most intelligent citizens are aware of their role without General Education. The second is both admirable and desirable. It seems almost too bad it is impossible. Oh, certainly the entire student body could be trained in some one field in order that it might have something in common, but we cannot return...
...certain parties with whom it was doing business took their complaints to University Hall. The managers of "314" employed practices common to the boards of other undergraduate publications. Watson would be establishing a doubtful precedent if he set an organization under official observation every time it had a business quarrel...
Blaik staggered lamely to his feet, explained: "I have no quarrel with pro ball. I merely think it is an entirely different game from college football, and that's what I said." Then Red Blaik went back to his regular business of coaching and saying very little. His all-winning (24 straight) Army team did his talking for him. At week's end they crushed all-losing (six straight) Harvard...
...fact. The running feud between Johnson and State Secretary Dean Acheson (TIME, Sept. 11) had become so bitter that defense planning was being hampered, and no one seemed to be able to get it going smoothly. Strictly as a family affair, Harry Truman was reportedly beginning to see the quarrel as an either/or proposition; in such a situation, once recognized, there was no doubt which one would have to go. It would be Louis Johnson...
...Schuman Plan for the integration of Europe's coal & steel industries was similarly threatened. When the Consultative Assembly voted a set of resolutions designed to give the proposed control authority more power, the British Labor group abstained. The quarrel between the British and French on the Schuman proposal flared up again when France's Paul Reynaud, shaking his finger at British Socialist Delegate Hugh Dalton, said: "We are told: 'Go ahead, you French, and build the House of Europe. If it is comfortable we will move into the room you have reserved for us. If it collapses...