Word: conducted
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...will nevertheless rally around the Term IV campaign. But this does not remove the possibility of a disastrous feud between President and Senate, either before or after Nov. 7. In no field could such a feud be more disastrous than on the traditional battleground of Presidents and Senates: the conduct of foreign relations and the making of peace...
...conduct of education is not an international matter. . . . The job of carrying educational ideas across national frontiers . . . requires considerable tact, sympathy and experience. . . . With the exception of the most obvious cases, a foreigner cannot tell whether teaching is warlike or not. Of course, it is plain in the goose step, the maps, the warlike mottoes: but when it comes to the more delicate emphases, the problem is so difficult [as to be] impossible...
Boston University will conduct an Institute on Post-War Problems on March 11, 12, and 13. The list of speakers will include, among others, C. H. Mathewson of Yale; Dean George R. Harrison and M. Stanley Livingston of M. I. T.; Dean Howard M. Jones of Harvard; President Charles Seymour of Yale; Governor John Bricker of Ohio; President Daniel Marsh of Boston University; and Morris B. Lambie of Harvard...
...That Franklin Roosevelt had become so immersed in the conduct of the war and foreign relations that he had lost touch with opinion, Congressional and public. This was easily negated: the President was not too immersed in the war to shake up his Term IV staff, and insert a fresh young leader, Robert Hannegan, as Democratic National Chairman. 2) That the President had deliberately set out to discredit Congress as a campaign technique, aimed mainly at soldiers, who are supposedly angry with Congress over the soldiers' vote bill...
...barriers. We are absolutely free to interest ourselves in the affairs of Europe. ..." Finally he offered Britain the diplomatic equivalent of Winston Churchill's wartime blood, toil, sweat and tears. Said Eden: "I do not in my experience remember when foreign policy was so diffi cult to conduct as it is now. ... I can only promise the House this: plenty of difficulties, plenty of disappointment and much deception in the times that lie ahead...