Word: ought
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...weapons-research development and laboratory-type experimentation." Peril on Path? Thus last week the President resolved the tricky problem of what to do when the test moratorium ran out with the old year. But he postponed into 1960 his decision on what the basic trend of U.S. nuclear policy ought to be -and on this broader decision his advisers were still divided. On the one hand, the Pentagon's civilian and military leaders, AEC Chairman McCone and most Senators on Congress' Joint Committee on Atomic Energy now argue specifically that the moratorium has dangerously slowed important U.S. weapons...
Said New Mexico's Clinton Anderson, Joint Committee chairman: "I don't think we can go on forever without any decision . . . Either we ought to get quickly some decision on the scientific data or we should just drop the whole business and resume testing." On the other side, White House Science Adviser Kistiakowsky, and U.S. Ambassador James Wadsworth, senior U.S. diplomat at the Geneva talks, argue that nuclear-test suspension is still the most promising path toward world disarmament and that the U.S. should regard the risk of Russian cheating, and the greater risk of weakening U.S. defenses...
...industrialization of many Asian nations, did not prevent the industrialization of Japan. Modernization is an intricate process, involving a balance between agricultural, technological and industrial growth. But given intelligent economic and political management and injections of Western aid, most-though not all-Asian, African and Latin American nations ought to be able to turn the trick...
...hypnotic eye. For the use of his name, Dr. Cooper wanted the right of script approval. (Executive Producer Robert Alan Aurthur changed the doctor's name to "Olson," avoided the issue.) Also the doctor's representatives suggested that his part be expanded, and that Marlon Brando ought to play it. Producer-Director Alex March, who gave the job to an actor named Martin Rudy, observed that "Brando is so devoted to the Method that he would have plunged right into Teresa Wright's head...
When Allyn pushes his company into a new country, he tries to give the market the product it wants, not the product he thinks it ought to have. For example, N.C.R.'s bookkeeping machines for the Middle East make entries from right to left as the Arabs do, have 72 Arabic characters and figures. Allyn believes in hiring the people in each country to run his business, is proud that there are only six U.S. citizens among his 23,000 employees overseas...