Word: beare
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...each and every one of the 30 million people of Thailand support the policy of the United States of standing firm against aggression." As for bombing North Vietnamese targets: "It is a hard decision to have to resort to force to meet force. But I think the future will bear out that this courageous position will not only have preserved peace in Southeast Asia and South Viet Nam, but will go into history as a most important measure to save the freedom of South Viet Nam and the whole of Southeast Asia...
...triumphs, grieved at his reverses and wept at his death," said Queen Elizabeth, as she gave to the U.S. an acre of British soil on which stood a simple, white stone monument, 10 ft. wide and 5 ft. high. Shaded by a hawthorne tree and overlooking the Thames, it bears a passage from Kennedy's inaugural address: "Let every nation know that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, or oppose any foe in order to assure the survival and success of liberty...
Frederick Sheldon Prize Fellowships have been awarded to David M. Bear '65, of Quincy House and Akron, Ohio; Joel E. Cohen '65, of Adams House and Washington, D.C.; Paul Horowits '65, of Lowell House and Summit, N.J.; and Stephen D. White '65, of Adams House and Cambridge. The Sheldon provides $2200 for undesignated travel...
...Make no mistake, the renationalization of steel, cloaked under efficiency or national interest, will bring other industries under the shadow of the Red Flag. To imagine that present socialist policies, even though they still bear the mark of middle-of-the-road politics, will continue under a larger parliamentary majority is akin to living like Alice in Wonderland. There is little doubt that the left wing of the Labor party will eventually rise and demand complete control of industry...
...Profession & an Art. The moneymen bear many titles, but basically they fall into three major groups. Enjoying fairly independent positions in their governments, the central bankers those who run national banking systems -feel the freest to criticize and sound alarms. The U.S.'s Martin, for example, keeps reminding Washington that the U.S. is dangerously close to inflation, and Lord Cromer has publicly lectured the Labor government. The finance ministers, on the other hand, are politi cal appointees who are less likely to pick a fight with their governments, but their greater awareness of political realities can be invaluable...