Word: seek
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...massive air and sea bombardment of Hanoi and other targets in North Viet Nam. President Johnson is not enthusiastic about any of them. Even after he sent U.S. planes over North Viet Nam during last summer's Tonkin Gulf crisis, he declared: "We still seek no wider war." Signs are that he is sticking to that position...
...unity that had already been accepted by the council in chapter-by-chapter votes. Some of the changes clearly modified the ecumenical intentions of the prelates. The text approved by the bishops noted that Protestants "find God," through the grace of the Holy Spirit, in Scripture; Paul made it "seek God." The Pope also announced that he would proclaim Mary as "Mother of the Church"-a new title, which the bishops had decided not to include in the Marian chapter of a schema on the church...
...wife is a Du Pont and a first cousin of Copeland's-moved to the chairmanship after 14 years as president. He advised the board that the best man to succeed him would be Copeland. Somewhat like Britain's Conservative Party, Du Pont's 30 directors seek instinctively to pick the man who can best unify them. They place a greater premium on group management than most companies do, and were impressed by Copeland's ability to lead top managers to a group decision. They took Greenewalt's advice...
...Undergraduate Council, comprising the chairmen of the nine House Committees and the president of the Freshman Council, would seek to express undergraduate opinion on such matters as interhouse dining and parietal hours. One of the House Committee chairmen would serve as president, and a vice-president and secretary-treasurer would also be elected...
...hardly fail to marvel at the dedication of Thomas M. Welch '66 who, on the subject of the function of the University, writes in a recent letter to the CRIMSON: "Those who would seek the Truth by endeavoring to synthesize a liberal knowledge of natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities are welcome at Harvard." Nor, surely, does he blaze new intellectual trails by resolutely declaring his opposition to Harvard's degeneration into "an intellectual factory capable of nothing more than spewing out a myriad of narrow-minded technicians and pedants." Yet Mr. Welch's stirring prose seems informed...