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Through the plain talk on "Foster's Hour," as well as through other recent words and deeds of the Eisenhower Administration, the U.S. policy of deterrence is gradually becoming clearer. Its basis is strength and firmness. If the Communists resort to force, the U.S. will retaliate in kind, and will make the punishment fit the crime. If the attack is massive, so will be the response; if it is a peripheral attack, the answer will be peripheral...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: Foster's Hour | 5/30/1955 | See Source »

...Council created the Committee after a report by Hatcher and Charles L. Edson '56 stressed the need to give undergraduates a clearer view of the various alumni organization's privileges. Prominent alumni leaders, Deans Leighton and Bender, William Bentinck-Smith '37, assistant to the President, and a number of students from various extra-curricular groups serve on the Committee...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Council Prepares Alumni Club Data | 4/30/1955 | See Source »

...nearly a hundred men a year. "Before we got any help," an officer on the Dudley Educational Committee explained, "a lot of the guys didn't know there was anything at the University except the lecture hall. Giving us a few improvements and a little attention made it clearer what we're missing by not having the same advantages as the houses...

Author: By Cliff F. Thompson, | Title: Commuter's Center: A Home Is No House | 12/14/1954 | See Source »

While the G.O.P. split on the McCarthy issue, there was no display of leadership from the White House. The 1954 election campaign had no clearer lesson than the dependence of the Republican Party on Eisenhower. But this fact has not been translated into party leadership. The fault was not wholly on the heads of Bill Knowland and his fellow senatorial "leaders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REPUBLICANS: Abdication on the Hill | 11/29/1954 | See Source »

Alastair Sim plays Inspector Poole, the man whose mysterious power drags the recognition of their own guilt from the reluctant people. Poole's mystic qualities are clearer when it becomes obvious that he is really the group's collective conscience. In this role, Sim is neither better nor worse than he has been in all his films that I have seen. In fact, his playing is most always the same from picture to picture, Sim being a sort of one man acting convention in the manner of such set characters as Charles Laughton and Robert Newton. He is always superb...

Author: By Robert J. Schoenberg, | Title: The Inspector Calls | 11/29/1954 | See Source »

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