Word: question
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Call the Bluff." So hardened by the heat of controversy are the opposing scientific views on test suspension that reconciliation or compromise seem almost out of the question. But from the political world last week came a suggestion that demonstrated the possibility of a middle ground. Recently returned from the Geneva talks (TIME, Nov. 24), Tennessee's Democratic Senator Albert Gore, a member of the Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy, urged his ideas on President Eisenhower. Gore's key point: the U.S. could test nuclear weapons underground, underwater or in outer space without danger of fallout...
Gore's 15-minute White House appointment stretched into 45 minutes as President Eisenhower shot questions at the Tennessean. The President bridled once when Albert Gore, carried away, said passionately: "I want my President to call [the Russian] bluff." But for the most part Dwight Eisenhower seemed impressed, asked Gore to submit his proposals in a formal memorandum. Gore did, also talked over his ideas with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and new AEC Chairman John McCone. Under close examination, flaws might appear in Albert Gore's plan, but at least it had the merit of suggesting...
...present, the Masters' considerations take on a double aspect. First is the question of room rates for Quincy, while the second in concerned with rent adjustment problems which will arise when suites are "deconverted" in the present Houses. The two are somewhat intertwined, as the number of deconversions will depend on how many upperclassmen are moved from their present quarters into Quincy next Fall...
...these dilemmas center around the question of whether or not students should pay what they can afford to pay regardless of the fact that some other student may be getting the same quarters for half the price...
...above begs the question every review must answer: is the play worth seeing? The answer, upon reflection, is yes. With its several flaws, Hartman's Godot stands up well when compared to the excellent all-Negro version. Matisoff may be even better than his opposite number was; only Graham falls far short, which merely proves that there are too few Geoffrey Holders in the theatre. And, after all, everyone should see Waiting for Godot at least once...