Word: seeks
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Moderates who would regain control of the party should urge their philosophy upon state and local organizations and encourage men of their ilk to seek both responsible party positions and public office. A "national conference" of Republicans, as proposed by Massachusetts Attorney General Edward W. Brooke, would be a reasonable means of determining a new party philosophy; and by next summer moderates and liberals might well prevail in such a confrontation. In any case, all mechanisms for achieving moderate control, including the Republican Governors' Conference and the Congressional caucuses, ought to be explored immediately...
...Minutemen intend to delay the destruction of the area until January, when they will seek legislation to halt construction of three underpasses on the Drive. "The trees," Moot said, "are only symbolic of the recreation space being destroyed and the taxpayers money being wasted...
...faith in, organized Christianity. Dr. Douglass, executive vice-president of the United Church Board, describes these experiments as "unstructured ministries." The theory behind these unstructured ministries is that Christianity can no longer sit back and wait for people to join a formal service-every-Sunday church, and must actively seek them out. Thus, in Chicago, the Rev. Donald N. Kelly conducts an "agora" (from the Greek for marketplace) ministry in the arcade of the Oakbrook Shopping Center's professional building. Kelly and his lay assistants present no formal services, instead concentrate on making contact with the unchurched who work...
General education in a liberal arts college should be a part of liberal education. As such, it should seek to develop the inherent powers and self-mastery of the student. It should organize knowledge not simply to sharpen minds but, ultimately, to make free...
...civil rights revolution has raised sharp questions. Where can a Mississippi Negro, for example, seek relief if the state denies him a fair trial and a federal judge refuses to listen? Must he travel the long road through the state courts to the U.S. Supreme Court? All over the South, arrested civil rights workers have complained that the tradition of immediate remand denies them federal hearings in cases of obviously violated constitutional rights. The answer to their complaint is Title IX of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which now permits remands to be appealed to U.S. courts of appeals...