Word: dependency
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...position that on major questions of war and peace, duly discussed, the allied nations' only sense-making course is bound into the course set by the U.S. Some leaders in allied lands have received this position with bad grace, preferring to imply that their security does not necessarily depend on the U.S. Last week, ministers of two British Commonwealth nations left no doubt about their stand...
While the Air Force does have some remarkable missiles, the stratospheric claims of Airman Gardner had the bumptious ring of old-style Air Force press-agentry. The missiles are less than the ultimate in weapons. The "sure-kill" Falcon will still depend on planes to get it to the right place, at the right time, under the right circumstances. Some missiles, like artillery shells, will be duds, and the enemy bombers will fly over. Even clever missiles may be fooled, e.g., a shower of shiny metal like Christmas tree tinsel can be as distracting to a radar hunter...
Galbraith's recall will depend upon the decision of a closed executive session of the committee, which will probably be held "not before a week from now," according to an administrative assistant of Sen. William J. Fulbright (D-Ark.), the chairman...
...increase in the size of the undergraduate body should depend primarily on the University's ability to build new Houses, Arthur Smithies, chairman of the Department of Economics, said yesterday...
Said Board Chairman Henry Ford II: "[Teachers] have not begun to share the benefits of the [nation's] expanded productive power . . . and the whole educational system suffers from this fact. Industry, commerce, government, the arts, the sciences and the professions-indeed our whole way of life-depend heavily upon the quality of our education . . . The Ford Foundation [wants] to emphasize the cardinal importance of the college teacher to our society...