Word: doubtfully
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...dependent variable. To put it another way, the question before the world money market today is whether the total economic strength of the United States is greater than the historic affection for gold of the greedy and the frightened. The answer to that question is not in doubt. If the U.S. dollar and gold ever fight to a finish, it is not the dollar that will be devalued...
...beyond changing the U.N.R.'s name to the "Union of Democrats for the Fifth Republic" (De Gaulle had forbidden the use of his name "even in adjectival form" in any party title). As to the direction of the future, Pompidou and the other speakers left that vague, no doubt for fear of infringing on the prerogatives of the absent master of the Elysees. De Gaulle was, intoned Pompidou, much as if he were invoking the Holy Spirit, "here directing our policy with firmness and clairvoyance...
...based investment firm Investors Overseas Services has now started a mutual-fund service exclusively for them - the first time such a program been offered to musicians anywhere in the world. While it is too early to predict the success of I.O.S.'s unusual venture there can be no doubt, as a company official said last week, that "the money is there...
...announcement keeping us open did come through, we started singing The Impossible Dream." That dream, to be sure, still has a deadline: a $3,500,000 transfusion is needed if K.S.C. is to stay open for five more years. But the college's undaunted students have no doubt that they can raise the money. They are already planning another fund-raising project. As for the University of Louisville, which was beaten out of its merger, it is on a financial treadmill itself and is negotiating for a merger with the University of Kentucky...
...could go on multiplying the difficulties of finding a reasonable line to draw between the non-university-administered activities of professors that are objectionable and those that are not, whatever one's standards of wickedness; and, further, I doubt whether there is enough consensus on standards to make it possible to draw an agreed line, even if some people think they know where to draw it. If I'm right about this, any line has to be arbitrary, as Professor Galbraith's line was arbitrary. (If Professor Galbraith interprets his original proposal as applying only to university-administered research...