Word: ought
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...typical Faculty reaction to the suggested debate came from Donald H. Fleming, professor of History, one of the 41 Faculty members who signed a petition on Cuba printed in the New York Times: "It is questionable whether American foreign policy ought to be debated with exiles," Fleming remarked...
Last week the Senate Armed Services Committee released the transcript of a closed April hearing at which McNamara outlined his vision of how the press should handle military news. "Why should we tell Russia," he said, "that the Zeus [antimissile missile] developments may not be satisfactory? What we ought to be saying is that we have the most perfect anti-ICBM system that the human mind will ever devise. Instead, the public domain is already full of statements that the Zeus may not be satisfactory; that it has deficiencies. I think it is absurd to release that kind of information...
...thing, there is some doubt as to what the public wants, and ratings are at best only "an indication of how many people saw what you gave them . . . I am not convinced that the people's taste is as low as some of you assume." Broadcasters, said Minow, ought to follow the example of the newspaper publishers, whose own polls consistently show that the two most popular items in the papers are the comics and the sob sisters. "But the news is still on the front pages of all newspapers, the editorials are not replaced by more comics...
Safe Conjecture 1: A significant number of persons within the Harvard community are deeply interested in arms control, and will want to know which of these two books, if either, they ought to read...
Starts Sunday: G. B. Shaw plus Peter Sellers plus Sophia Loren plus Alastair Sim plusplus Vittorio De Sica ought to equal something grand, zany and sparkling. But THE MILLIONAIRESS is merely routine gag comedy all too much of the time. In point of fact, this is a very dud avocado, indeed. Co-featured is a travesty of William Faulkner, plagiaristically entitled SANCTUARY. Don't expect to recognize the characters if you read the book. Lee Remick whimpers as Temple Drake, and Yves Montand is hopelessly miscast as her down and way-out croole lover. Daily from...