Word: appealed
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Kemble felt that an upper level Nat. Sci. course ought to be required, but emphasized the difficulty of creating a course that would appeal to advanced students in all areas of science. William H. Drury, assistant professor of Biology and Nat. Sci. 6 lecturer, agreed saying, "The Natural Sciences don't cut across similar areas as often as the Humanities and the Social Sciences...
...Francisco on the 10th anniversary of the signing of the charter. Many of the foreign ministers of the world-maybe even Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov-will be there. We respectfully suggest that it would be fitting for President Eisenhower to open that conference in person with an appeal for a new effort to establish peace...
PRESIDENT EISENHOWER'S popularity is a real political phenomenon of great significance. The fact that the Republicans could win the [1952] election only with Eisenhower was not surprising; the appeal of a war hero won more than one election in this country. The permanence of the Eisenhower popularity is, however, more significant. [Eisenhower's] popularity is rooted in the fact that he is the agent of the acceptance by Republicanism of the major policies of the Rooseveltian Revolution of the past two decades. In foreign affairs, that meant acceptance of the concept of our nation's responsibility...
...defeated in 1956. But it does prove that there is more flexibility in American democracy than our critics give us credit for. All political phenomena have a biographical pinnacle and a social and economic base. The biographical pinnacle of the Eisenhower phenomenon presents us with Eisenhower's personal appeal to the voters. But the political and social base of the phenomenon consists of the reluctant conversion of the U.S. business community to the revolution in domestic and foreign policy which it professed to abhor. The conversion may not be completely honest or absolutely complete. But the fact...
...found the demands "unjustified . . . unrealistic," since they would boost the unions' scale well above that of the rest of the country. But the negotiators refused to bargain. Labor Minister Sir Walter Monckton proposed that the strikers go back to work on all papers, pending a settlement, but his appeal fell on deaf ears...