Word: accept
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...York meeting is the first move by the literary journal to seek a steady of outside income. President Jaime Urrutia '63 said that the conference may a decision to create a capital fund, but added that he would accept " that works." A permanent endowment giving "something near an income yearly" would be an ideal solution, he said...
Chancellor Branscomb took over in 1946. He put in nine years of dealing with the cliquish, 44-man board, and then persuaded Harold S. ("Mike'') Vanderbilt to accept the presidency and lead the school back to the role that his great-grandfather had charted for it-strengthener of ties "between all sections of our common country." Sportsman and Financier Vanderbilt was the first of his family to serve on the board, and he took the job seriously; in private airplanes, he flies into Nashville once a month from homes in New York, Palm Beach and Virginia, works...
...Hall group is desirous of endorsing "hypocrisy." As was admitted earlier in the editorial, the "current regulations are far from restrictive," yet the CRIMSON still insists on challenging those who want to maintain such a system and finds itself justified in pitying those morally weak individuals who refuse to accept the responsibility of rules which are, in truth, "far from restrictive...
Piel first raises the serious matter of general scientific ignorance. People have learned to accept science as a source of endless improvement, material comfort, and abundance, yet most the exact workings of science are mysterious. "Ironically, science itself seems to have fallen heir to much of what remains of the frightened awe formerly accorded to the outer darkness...
Taylor's book is, among other things, a challenge to laymen and historians whose views of the Second World War rest on a moral judgment of Hitler and the "Nazi idea." It is not easy to accept such a challenge; for there can be no compromise in a democrat's mind with the Nazi regime as it operated within Germany between 1933 and 1945. And it is difficult to avoid extending one's critique of that regime to its performance in the field of foreign relations, and to count Hitler guilty of diplomatic sins just as one condemns his domestic...