Word: cents
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...major problem has been to disillusion people," Margolin said in an interview last weekend. "Most seniors still don't believe that they will be drafted after graduation. They think their draft boards are different--but 70 per cent of them are going to end up in Vietnam...
...which no matter how the newspeople discuss its meaning ad nauseum, was a vote not so much against any combination of things; but a vote FOR Senator McCarthy. This is the man we are looking for--honest and believable. He came here a laughable figure, magnanimously conceded 5 per cent of the vote and he won because he represents what the young have been parading and sitting down and preaching to us about--plain honesty. Now ask yourself what you really think Kennedy would have done if the vote were only 5 per cent. The answer to that is clear...
...doing. On paper, the Shaw record is impressive. Since James Cheek took over as President in 1964, big changes have been made. Only six months after he was installed, the new President had pulled Shaw out of the red. In three years he has raised faculty salaries 150 per cent. Last year things looked so good that Cheek launched a $14.5 million building program. By almost any standard, the figures are encouraging...
From the universities' point of view, Johnson made the worst possible move: a National Council of Graduate School study predicted that total U.S. graduate enrollment would drop 70 per cent because...
Still, the U.S. economy will be comparatively untouched by a reduction in international trade; exports comprise only three per cent of the GNP. The developing nations, some of whom rely on exports for seventy per cent of GNP, will be hit hardest. Vietnam will no longer be the only developing nation paying for the war; by impeding international trade we will have managed to increase the cost so that other nations might share...