Word: nsa
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...explaining their reasons for withdrawal, both organizations expressed dissatisfaction with certain NSA political and social positions...
...testing the travel ban in a manner tactically different from the approaches chosen by Worthy and Zemel. Early in 1962, Castro issued an invitation to the Natonal Student Association. Apparently he felt that a student visit would improve the Cuban image in the eyes of the American public. Although NSA declined the invitation, Castro did not withdraw it. Last fall, a group in New York calling themselves the Ad Hoc Student Committee for Travel to Cuba set about organizing a trip to the island. The Committee finally sent fifty-nine students to Cuba for two months during the summer. Returning...
...most worthless article in the 16-page magazine is not either of these, however, nor yet Danny Boggs' analysis of the Conservative revival at last August's NSA Convention. Boggs came to the conclusion that, although conservative ideas, well-presented, did have reasonable chance of passage, simply saying "This is Conservative" was not sufficient to get a measure passed. It is a rare critique of the NSA which claims that...
...cannot really be said that the magazine is terribly bad, on the whole. It's well proofed and contains few patently false statements. On the other hand, it says nothing new, and, aside from Mr. Boggs' report on the NSA convention, merely mouths cliches. Nobody around here ever thought the Conservative Club did like Khrushchev or oppose individuality...
Perhaps if the authors of the CRIMSON articles wish to call quiet effectiveness "non-existence," and noisy impotence "existence," then the right indeed disappeared at the last Congress, but those are definitions I feel few rational people would accept. Danny J. Beggs '65 Chmn, Harvard delegation to NSA Convention