Word: pathe
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...review o' a flic callit The Bridal Path [Dec. 28] werr itsel' a bit o' a clish-maclaverlie skirling indeed, indeed. Wha' wi' a' tha ap'str'phes an' dooble-Gaelic an' sich orrtheaugraficul odditees as wuid baefuddle e'en tha quare English boobies tae tha sooth, a mon cuid reedie feind 'is puir Glengarry a muckle addled amoong a' tha thistly syntax...
...Although we consider ourselves free to resume nuclear-weapons testing, we shall not resume it without announcing our intention in advance. During this period . . . the U.S. will continue in its active program of 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...
...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, as the lesser of evils in a world of mounting armaments. The President, deeply moved by the cries for peace on his trip through Asia and North Africa...
...York Governor Nelson Rockefeller swung the door wide on 1960 last week by announcing his withdrawal from the race for the Republican presidential nomination (see Republicans), and in so doing cleared the path for Vice President Nixon. The half dozen rivals for the Democratic nomination at last had something in common: a lusty will to make Nixon their favorite target, and the Democratic prize probably would go to the man who could prove that he might beat him. The biggest day on the 1960 schedule would come in November when the U.S. would go to the polls to choose...
...share of his work life in a company's business and who has performed competently in his job is entitled to every consideration we can give him should he find himself affected by technological advance." Once that is clearly understood, the boulders blocking management's automative path will turn out to be pebbles...