Word: addresses
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...realistically last week, the administration, faculty and students of Amherst College, which has so far escaped serious disturbances, tossed the ball back to Richard Nixon. In a letter signed by Amherst President Calvin Plimpton, they predicted that turmoil would continue "until you and the other leaders of our country address more effectively, massively and persistently the major social and foreign problems of our society." Certainly the Amherst statement reflected the views of many moderates. Yet the equation is not that simple. The major social and foreign problems of society will not be solved quickly or easily. No matter what...
...expected to bring the President about $350,000; when he bought it in 1963, the list price was $135,000. The Nixons are not planning beyond the White House years, but San Clemente may well become their permanent home; they are planning to use it as their voting address. Although they spent a househunting weekend there in March, they were not the first presidential visitors. One summer afternoon in 1935, Cotton hosted a barbecue for 4,000 guests, among them Franklin Roosevelt...
Miss Gill said that she wanted SFAC to encourage the Faculty "to adopt a motion whereby implementation of the Wilson Report would be put in the hands of the Board of Overseers" instead of the Corporation. She also wanted SFAC's help in getting an invitation to address the Faculty...
Though the foreign ministers were gathered to celebrate NATO's 20th anniversary, they used the occasion to discuss how the 15-member alliance* should react to changing technological and political realities, especially to overtures from the East bloc for improved relations. In an address to the delegates, President Nixon came as close as anyone could to summing up NATO's attitude toward its Communist opponents. "All of us are ready as conditions change," said the President, "to turn that fist [of self-defense] into the hand of friendship." But, warned the President, "it is not enough to talk...
Strong stuff for a man who has an artificial leg and a heart condition, and who is not exactly in fighting trim at 55. But he meant it, and as a courtesy to the "social Neanderthals," he listed his office phone number, home address and the usual hour (8 p.m.) he could be found "on the darkened Fifth Street sidewalk at the side entrance to the Chronicle." No one showed...