Word: sanfords
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Strong & Balanced. Such personalism fails to impress some campus observers. "The big picture is unchanged," says Stanford Psychologist Nevitt Sanford. "Students are by and large not interested in the larger questions of the day in this country." Chatham's President Eddy frets that "youth is beginning to retreat behind excellence" to what he calls "the permanent alibi of scholarship." Critics also sourly complain that today's collegians are "totally defeatist" and "so damn sober." "There's a material sophistication that is not matched by a spiritual one," says one California professor, adding, "They all seem to have...
North Carolina Governor Terry Sanford will address the Young Democratic Club of Harvard and Radcliffe at 4 p.m. today in the Lowell House Junior Common Room. At 8:30 p.m. the Governor will give the Alfred Dexter Simpson Lecture on Administration in Fogg Lecture Hall. Both speeches are open to the public...
...issue of the Commission's legality centers around the enabling legislation which provides that no more than four of its seven members can belong to any one political party. Both Bender and Sanford J. Fox, the other commissioner whose status is in question, admit to changing their affiliation from Republican to Independent less than one week before Gov. Volpe appointed them to the Commission in September, 1962, despite another state law which provides that in qualifying for a state board an individual's party affiliation will be determined by how he was registered two years prior to appointment...
Oklahoma's Henry Bellmon, the lone Republican Governor at the conference, judged that Goldwater would win his state handily in an election held now. Even North Carolina's Terry Sanford, a strong Kennedy supporter, sadly admitted that "certainly President Kennedy isn't as popular in North Carolina as he was six months ago." Sanford figured he knew the reason for the President's slip in the South-Attorney General Robert Kennedy. Said Sanford: "We had it knocked before this civil rights business. If he would fire Bobby tomorrow, we'd have it licked again...
...usual Wallace made the most noise, but others, too, were of a mind to ignore the Supreme Court on this one. Said North Carolina Governor Terry Sanford: "We will go on having Bible readings and prayers in the schools of this state just as we always have." Said Georgia School Superintendent Claude Purcell: "If the schools want to include a reading of some sort, that would be up to them...