Word: scopes
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...maritime program works, it may go a long way toward preserving the essentially private character of the U.S. merchant marine, while at the same time broadening the scope of Government aid to a badly distressed industry. Some critics may complain that an annual outlay of $174 million is too costly a subidy. But the U.S. needs a strong merchant marine both in peace and war. The current program seems a relatively cheap price...
...should change students' earning habits to any sizable extent, the Student Employment Office and the Financial Aid Center may have to further reconsider their programs. But the scope of the necessary changes will depend in large part on what happens in the next few years in the national economy...
...essential raw materials to tide it over the initial shock of any future attack. During the Korean war, stockpile expenditures rose from $438 million in fiscal 1950 to $919 million in 1953, and then back down to $650 million after the war ended. But last March the entire scope of the program was radically changed. Instead of military men, civilians now control the program, and it was expanded to include a new series of "long-range" goals that would make the U.S. virtually self-sufficient in strategic materials...
...Massachusetts resembles other state universities in the scope of its curriculum, it differs from most publicly-financed colleges in having its great period of expansion still ahead of it. The University stands now, in the words of Publicity Director Robert McCartney, "about where Michigan State stood...
...total economy that cannot be made by smaller-scale enterprises and that . . . should not be added to the burden of the state . . . Big business has not merely been kept effectively subject to a competitive system; on the whole it has also made an essential contribution to its scope, vitality and effectiveness...