Word: growing
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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President Pusey yesterday played down the implications which the new alumni campaign might have for immediate expansion of the College, and restated his familiar theme that Harvard would make no conscious decision on expansion, but would grow, slowly, to meet the new demands of the nation...
...first implanted in its students, and it is here that this love is most devotedly and consistently served. The College's inescapable first concern is to stimulate that kind of intellectual and spiritual life which will enable a young mind to find its way in the world and to grow in confidence from the exercise of its own power. It has only a restrained secondary interest in the usefulness or application of knowledge. Both things, of course, are of great importance. There must also always be in both a constant concern for increasing knowledge. But it is only...
...made apparent last week by a big retrospective exhibition at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Conn. More than 100 of his works were assembled for the show, marking the bicentennial of Trumbull's birth in Lebanon, Conn. Together they testified that Trumbull's reputation deserves to grow, for it does not yet match his just deserts...
...Grow or Die." How well the new cars go over may well determine the company's whole future. No one knows better than President L. L. ("Tex") Colbert the one inviolate axiom of the auto industry: Grow or die. So far, Chrysler has slowly been weakening. After the poor 1954 model, which dropped Chrysler's share of the market; to a bare 12.9%, a succession of new designs and higher-powered cars in 1955 and 1956 have only won back a 16.5% share of the market. But in 1957, Chrysler will be loaded for bear. Cautiously, Colbert himself...
...Although our psychiatric staff is somewhat larger than that of many comparable universities, the clinical demands which are made upon it grow ever more taxing. Almost always every available space in the psychiatrists' appointment books is filled for weeks in advance. In this already overburdened setting new patients keep streaming in, often with urgent problems requiring immediate attention. Appointment schedules must be repeatedly altered to meet the new demands and new patients in acute difficulty must be sandwiched into the already crammed daily program of work. Some of the students with less pressing trouble must have their appointments set aside...