Word: localize
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Apathy may represent the mood of the American voter toward the 1956 Presidential election, but certainly not that of Harvard University. Political organizations at the College and the Law School have shown an election-year variety of vitality in campaigning for local and national candidates on both tickets. Even Radcliffe has experienced a minor form of political awakening...
...Club, of which he is president, does not believe in "blanket endorsement" of all Republican candidates, but prefers to concentrate its work with one selected man who lives up to the philosophy of Eisenhower Republicanism. The Eisenhower Club has chosen Representative Curtis, who wrote them for assistance, as the local candidate for whom to campaign. Korn estimated that an average of five people a night had been going into the Tenth District from Harvard for the past three weeks. He predicted that this would be maintained right up until the election day, when members of his club would...
...member of the Cambridge traffic department yesterday supported the Student Council's suggestion that the University was being more than a good citizen on its ticketing policy, since, he said, the students were being "hit twice as hard as the local residents...
...leadership in the forty-year career of Jim Curley. For despite his occasional imprisonment and current forced retirement, Boston's loyalty to the Curley image--to the man who provides Christmas baskets for the poor and keeps his followers on the City Payroll--nevertheless endures as a source of local pride...
Altman felt that the whole drive against illegal parking might be a scheme to get more people to rent local garages. "Most cities ban overnight parking so that they can sweep the streets and remove snow more easily," he said, "but Cambridge doesn't seem to do either of these very often...