Word: rostow
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...affirmative was upheld by Powers McLean '35, Oscar M. Lurie '35, and James J. Fuld '37 of Harvard, who maintained that destruction of the new deal would destroy the bright future of the Administration. The negative team from Yale, Edward H. Kenyon '37, Walter W. Rostow '36, and John Strauss '35, gave figures to show that the new deal was "a means not justifying the end." Fredrick doW, Bolman '33, President of the Debating Council, presided at the meeting...
Members of both the Harvard and Yale teams will be guests at a special dinner in Eliot House preceding the debate. James J. Fuld '37, Oscar M. Lurie '35, Walter W. Rostow '36, and John Strauss '35, speaking for Yale. Speeches will be twelve minutes in length, with the first Affirmative speaker giving the only rebuttal. The decision will be given by vote of the audience on the morits of the resolution...
...ponderous article, in which verbs go hunting around through vast paragraph sentences for their subjects. E. V. Rostow discusses "A Role for the Middle Classes." One suspects that Rostow might have been a Marxist of some shade or other before March 4, but that he is now caught almost against his will, in the spiritual upswing of Roosevelt's unfaltering "bourgeois" leadership. There is hope for a temporary middle-class ruling class, but whether this is to be enlightened capitalism, Toryism, liberalism, or socialism, the writer dose not make clear...
Peter Shuebruk '33, of Cohasset, and Henry Caraway Hatfield '33, of Evanston, Illinois, were made recipients of the Charles and Julia Henry scholarships, which provide for a year of study at Oxford University, according to an announcement last night. The names of two Yale seniors, E. V. Rostow and J. W. Hastie, who will go abroad are announced at the same time...