Word: gurney
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...lineup last week: For Gray?Republicans Marlow Cook, Hiram Fong, Edward Gurney, Roman Hruska, Hugh Scott, Strom Thurmond and Democrat James Eastland. Against Gray?Democrats Birch Bayh, Quentin Burdick, Robert Byrd, Sam Ervin, Philip Hart, Edward Kennedy and John Tunney. Undecided?Republican Charles Mathias and Democrat John McClelland...
...emphasized that he supported the Kilson position, but that he was not an expert Afro-American scholar. Kilson and Patterson needed a white social scientist with credentials in Afro-American Studies to speak for joint concentrations with enthusiasm and conviction. The ideal person would have been H. Stuart Hughes, Gurney Professor of History and Political Science, who guided the Faculty Council resolution skillfully through the Faculty. But Hughes took no position on the Kilson resolution, probably because he thought that doing so might jeopardize the Departmental reorganization. Hughes was so careful on this issue that he abstained from the final...
...even Eliot's liberalism did not mean that the Magenta would have an easy go of it with the Administration. As Henry A. Clarke, The Magenta's first President and guiding spirit, later narrated the story in an earlier history of The Crimson. Dean Gurney called Clark to his office for an explanation of the new paper and then...
...Senatorial election in Massachusetts, Edward M. Kennedy '54 ('56) ran in the Democratic Primary against State Attorney General, Edward McCormack, whom he defeated. In the final election, Kennedy was opposed by Republican George Cabot Lodge '50, now professor of Business Administration at Harvard, and Independent H. Stuart Hughes, Gurney-Professor of History. Kennedy soundly trounced both opponents, although his only experience to date had been as a dollar-a-year assistant district attorney in Middlesex County after passing his bar examination. Commending his honesty and dedication to principle. The Crimson endorsed Hughes. After the Kennedy victory, the paper editorialized...
...Stuart Hughes, Gurney Professor of History, carried the ball for the Faculty Council and pushed through a resolution which calls for the dean of the Faculty to appoint inter departmental search committees to seek out additional tenured members for the Department, and for the executive committee to consist of all full-time teaching members of the Department...