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Flynn attacked a proposal of George Gilder '61-3 to "conduct the arms race so vigorously that Khrushchev will realize the threat of force will not intimidate the West." The Tocsin member termed Gilder's suggestion "a proposal which says the United States cannot afford to co-exist with the Soviet Union except by perpetuating this conflict." The inherent weakness of this position, he asserted, is that it "would cause no change of the principles on which both are operating...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tocsin' Member Attacks Western Nuclear Build-Up | 11/22/1961 | See Source »

Individually, George Gilder, winner of last year's race, copped first place again this year. He was awarded the spot only after two Dudley freshmen, who finished first and second, were disqualified as members of the freshman team. Don Kursch of Dunster and Jeff Peck of Lowell finished second and third respectively...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SPORTING SCENE | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

Roscoe Drummond has written an enthusiastic column about it that I do not understand, although I suspect it to be approving. The magazine's letter pages grin with encouraging notes from progressive members of the Congress. Publisher Chapman and Editor Gilder have accepted (I hear) numerous speaking engagements. If the entire country is not exactly agog with Advance, at least the part of it that is has spoken not the least unkindness...

Author: By Robert W. Gordon, | Title: Advance | 8/3/1961 | See Source »

...lead article is by Senator Javits of New York; it concerns "The Free Enterprise System in Foreign Policy"; and, conventional phrases at its start and finish subtracted, it ranks with Gilder's discussion of nuclear testing in No. 1 as Advance's most intelligent and interesting offering so far. There is nothing new in his suggestions of increased direct private investment abroad, or of government leading "American business away from a reliance on protectionism to a reassertion of its basic strength," but in his presentation of them there is something appealingly lucid that one finds neither in Committee for Economic...

Author: By Robert W. Gordon, | Title: Advance | 8/3/1961 | See Source »

What else?--there is still more carried in this slim blue frame. (For there are no ads, beyond an announcement that Chapman and Gilder are available for Limited Speaking Engagements.) Morton Halperin of the Center for International Affairs revives the notion of limited war tersely and persuasively; Edward S. Cabot alternates the obvious and the original in a highly irritating fashion in an article on Ghana. And, perhaps inevitably, the editors enjoy a little Democrat-baiting, in Cabot's indictment of Soapy Williams' behavior in Africa, in a collection of silly anecdotes called "The Political Notebook...

Author: By Robert W. Gordon, | Title: Advance | 4/18/1961 | See Source »

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