Word: keys
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Crimson Key Society has elected its new officers for 1969-70. President, Edward W. Jones of Kirkland House and Dahlgren, Virginia; VicePresident, Thomas R. Johnston of Dunster House and Schenectady, New York, Treasurer, James W. Sullivan of Winthrop House and Bronxville, New York; Chairman of Freshman Orientation Committee, Joseph J. Thaler of Quincy House and Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Chairman of Schools Committee, Mark T. Stein of Leverett House and Nashville, Tenn.; Chairman of University Guides Committee, Bradley P. Ware, of Eliot House and Buffalo, New York; and Chairman of Athletic Committee, Kirkman K. Dolby of Eliot House...
...Gary, Ind., Richard Hatcher literally had to break in on the job; his predecessor had not left the office key with him. Cleveland's Carl Stokes, after quelling a summer riot that took ten lives, had to face near rebellion in his own police department...
...blow an unfriendly gunboat out of the water. And the bipolar alliances that arose from the ashes of World War II almost inevitably ensure that a blow struck at a weak nation may be answered by a considerably more powerful ally. As a result, the big powers' key problem is how to control the actions of their smaller brethren: consciously or unconsciously, small nations have come to realize that they can act with relative impunity to achieve their own goals. The United Nations, once looked upon as a potential peace-keeping force, seems as unable to solve miniature clashes...
Risk Is the Key. No matter how high they rise, the hired employees of corporations rarely earn as much as owners, partners or other entrepreneurs, who get a payoff for personal risk. Apart from top management, lawyers are the best-rewarded corporate employees, averaging about $29,000 in high legal-department positions. But lawyers in private practice have no ceilings, and incomes of $50,000 for younger partners in leading firms are fairly common...
...stop at a reasonable 10% change in parity but insist capriciously on 20% or more. That would give France an enormous trading advantage, and force a competitive devaluation of other currencies. As David Rockefeller, president of the Chase Manhattan Bank, said in London last week, the franc is "the key currency. If you could guarantee that nothing will happen to the franc this year, you could guarantee there would be no monetary crisis...