Word: depending
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Wilson cannot imagine that some of his remarks will be swallowed easily. In his essay on sex, after propounding the wisdom of selective breeding through artificial insemination, he closes: "Do not say that you turn in distaste from a selection so calculated and conscious, which does not depend on 'the heart.' In how many marriages and liasons in the society we actually inhabit does no calculation enter or the heart play a cardinal role?" This is necessarily repugnant to those of young enthusiasms--perhaps of healthy emotional enthusiasms. But Wilson does not demand that it be eaten; he asks only...
Unless the varsity can regain the power with which it crushed Brown last weekend, the match could go either way. But a Bruin win would depend heavily on the play of highly-rated Brown goalie Harry Batchelder, who made 47 saves in the game on Saturday
...Eisenhower Administration now expects to assist only those countries -say Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon and Jordan to start with-which share its determination to bar Soviet aggression and infiltration into the Middle East. In testimony before Congress, Secretary Dulles said that any future aid to Nasser "will depend on whether Egypt's international conduct will be such as to justify help." He went on to say that while the U.S. has "no present plans" for granting aid to Egypt, it might "in a year or two," when, as he hoped, Egypt would be free of Communist influence...
...world of plenty for all? At times in history, American business has met its responsibilities; at other times, it has not. The question now is, will it rise to the occasion to think anew in the next few decades? And the answer to that question is going to depend on the extent to which America's business executives know not only where business now is; but perhaps more important, where it has come from, and where it is going. These answers will come only from men who have a long-range purpose clearly in mind; men who, in short...
Unrequited Love. The White House knows that it still cannot depend on Knowland for down-the-line support, but it respects his sincerity of purpose and-because they are always the result of careful thought-his opinions. Ike, carefully cordial toward Knowland, unfailingly calls him "Bill." Knowland, carefully correct, unfailingly calls Ike "Mr. President." In the privacy of his office Ike sometimes grows hot under the collar when Knowland challenges a cherished White House plan, but the President is a confirmed Constitutionalist and neither asks-nor expects-Knowland to toe the executive line. On one vital point...