Word: loses
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...country to being pro-Western, even though its campaign propaganda talks as loudly about "positive neutrality" as anyone else. The resignations may bring on a general election, but there is no evidence that in such an election, the ruling clique of leftist politicians and army nationalists would lose...
...weakening of the Italian Department continued this month with the resignation of a newly-appointed instructor, and the expiration of the terms of another instructor and a visiting lecturer, it was learned yesterday. The Department will lose its most distinguished member, Charles S. Singleton, professor of Italian, at the end of the month...
Sullivan stated that the Building Service local had no definite plans to seek jurisdictional elections among other groups. "If we lose this time," he continued, "I will never lead another organizing drive at Harvard...
...have learned something." Asked whether he would favor stopping the tests if the Russians did too, he says: "All we ask is inspection," i.e., to make sure the Russians keep their promises. An authority with access to Libby's sources of information believes that the Russians would lose more by stopping tests than the U.S. would, which may explain why the Russians will not agree to suspension of tests, with inspection...
...International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. Chicago-born, Yale-educated ('28) Farwell was an executive at International Business Machines and waxmaker S. C. Johnson & Son before taking over Underwood's presidency in 1955 with the job of reorganizing the company from top to bottom. When the company continued to lose money and Underwood's board of directors turned down a proposed merger with National Cash Register Co., President Farwell had no choice but to resign. Replacing him is another Yaleman ('33), Vice President for Finance Frank E. Beane, 44, who will take over as Underwood's chairman...