Word: discussing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Bobby Kennedy, for one, wanted to make sure of that. He requested a meeting "to discuss how we might work together in the interest of national unity during the coming months," and Johnson quickly agreed to the get-together. It was their first formal session since the bitter 45-minute confrontation in the White House 14 months ago, when the President angrily lashed out at Bobby for having fostered rumors that he had received a Viet Nam peace feeler during a European visit. Now, in an hour-long meeting described by both sides as "cordial," Johnson briefed Kennedy...
...000th BBC broadcast, celebrated with considerable fanfare both in London and New York, Cooke broke his own rules and devoted his full 15 minutes to Viet Nam. Yet, as he remarked on the air, he would rather discuss the coming of spring or children at play. "Whenever things look the least bit good," he says, "I'd much rather talk about the American phenomenon of summer bachelors than Viet Nam." Because of this attitude, Cooke's critics charge him with reporting only the "smiling face of America," of "fiddling while Rome burns." To which Cooke once replied...
...Council also recommended a number of specific solutions. It suggested that RUS elect some officers to work on the constitution, and that the students and Trustees hold a conference to discuss the problems...
Some classes will resume Tuesday afternoon but Chester W. Hartman, Associate Professor of City Planning, and Samuel S. Bowles, Assistant Professor of Economics, were in the process last night of organizing classes to discuss racism and strategies to counteract...
...faculty sit back and drink another highball for a job well done, they should be advised that there are, indeed, some who feel that much of the student participation at this university is nothing but "tokenism." President Harnwell sits on the University Forum to placate students, not to "discuss any issue they consider important." If anyone thinks that the footin-the-door which students have gained is student power, they are deluded. The "quiet revolution" that you find so reassuring is going to heat...