Word: mets
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Last month a group of 58 social scientists and government officials, sponsored by the Harvard-M.I.T. Joint Center for Urban Studies, met to consider ways of improving the enumeration of non-white minority groups, such as Negroes, Puerto Ricans, and Mexican-Americans in the 1970 Census...
Others are also conceptualizing. O. Roy Chalk, publisher of the city's Spanish language El Diario-La Prensa, has met with officials of seven newspaper unions in the hope of putting out a standard-size afternoon daily patterned after the Chicago Tribune. Chalk "did not make specific proposals," said a man who is something of a connoisseur of specific proposals, Bert Powers, president of the New York Typographical Union...
...Nazi customs official from Stettin, Pannenberg, 38, did his doctoral studies in theology at the University of Heidelberg; he acknowledges a major intellectual debt to Heidelberg's Old Testament Scholar Gerhard von Rad. At the university, Pannenberg became the leader of a group of young thinkers who met for late-night discussions of theology, and who in 1961 formulated their principles in a joint volume of essays called Revelation as History. Although not widely known in the U.S., Pannenberg has lectured at the University of Chicago, Harvard and Claremont, and three of his major works are in the process...
Stewart never carried out his plan to seek funds for the extension in 1966 because of the hostile reception it met in the Senate. The current economic squeeze may forestall the extension again this year, but with the Congressional leaders solidly behind it, eventual success is likely. Like the East Front extension, which was approved in 1958 and funded a few years later, Stewart's present proposal seems inescapable...
...story is true, however, about the resident on Inman Street who came out swinging when the canvasser rang his bell--his next door neighbor had telephoned a warning that the peaceniks were on their way. But that's the only story of its kind in Cambridge. "We have met no aggressive hostility," Emonds says...