Word: equality
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...programs, they will scarcely succeed in making tutorial important to the student or a valuable learning experience, though he may in time learn to do whatever it will take to get a B minus for satisfactory conversation on the philosophy of history. This grade would then be entered, given equal weight with his mark for Renaissance history or Soviet government...
...first witness. In four hours of testimony, shaggy-browed, often emotional Dr. Edward Teller (TIME, Nov. 18) ran off a grim morning line on U.S. chances in the race for survival. The University of California physicist estimated that Russia is closing the gap in nuclear weapons, is about equal to the U.S. in aircraft and radar development, is ahead in ballistic missiles. Said Teller: "I would not say that the Russians caught up with us because they stole our secrets. They caught up with us because they worked harder. A Russian boy thinks about becoming a scientist like our young...
...fallacy like blind bird dogs-books about elephants, Teddy bears, toads, and even, in one notorious case (E. B. White's Stuart Little), mice. In the present case, the Gallico Cat ("Who Thought She Was God," according to the book's subtitle) mixes ailurophilia and religiosity in equal parts...
Because he does not discriminate between science and non-science concentrators, Emerson predicted that the Medical School will continue to admit an equal percentage of the applicants from each group. An increase in the number of non-science majors will also produce a similar increase in the makeup of the first year class...
...West) virtually unknown cellist made an appearance in East Berlin last week that left listeners surprised and breathless. Soviet Russia's Daniel Shafran, 34, turned out to be a sometime prodigy (the Soviets bought him his Amati cello when he was only 14) who today may have no equal among the younger generation of cellists...