Word: musts
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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What applies to Inland Steel must apply to everybody else including the H. J. Heinz Co. and Mr. Girdler and Republic Steel with whom S. W. O. C. had not even been able to reach an oral agreement. Mr. Girdler's repeated insistence that he would never sign an agreement with the "irresponsible, racketeering" C. I. O. unless forced to, seemed on its way to a final test. But three days after its Inland ruling, the NLRB gave Mr. Girdler something more immediate to worry about. In a bristling 60,000-word decision, the board held...
...destructive of the hope of winning Germany and other powers back to European cooperation, possibly in some new form, but also we should be doing something against which we have always worked, namely, the division of Europe into blocs formally ranged against one another and which in our view must greatly aggravate the risk of ultimate catastrophe...
...Foundation concluded that this alarming state of affairs was probably representative of the U. S. as a whole, that to remedy it the colleges must: 1) choose their students more carefully by establishing a central registry of high-school graduates' ability, by seeking and financing the best students; 2) stop putting all students through the same hopper and advancing them on the basis of time spent in classes. Elated at the proved reliability of the objective, multiple-response tests they used to measure students' knowledge, the report's authors, Dr. William S. Learned, a staff member...
...cardinal entrained for Rome, there must have rung in his ears the German words of a broadcast from the powerful Vatican radio station, in which the words "worthlessness and faithlessness" were applied to "shepherds" actions" which greatly resembled his own. Although the Vatican insisted that this broadcast, made by an anonymous Jesuit, happened entirely by coincidence, its observations on "political Catholicism" were pat and pointed. "False political Catholicism" the Jesuit defined as an attitude, either of the "simple faithful or officials in public life," which consists in "an exaggerated carefulness of tactics and in a weak adaptation to established...
When Cardinal Innitzer emerged, he virtually retracted the plebiscite statement, declaring in Osservatore Romano that it "did not intend to be an approval of what was, or is, irreconcilable with the law of God and the freedom and rights of the Catholic Church. Besides, that declaration must not be interpreted by the State and by the party as an obligation of conscience, nor must it be employed for propaganda purposes...