Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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These critics see the general education program as the last bulwark sep- erating the College from being the first four years of the GSAS. They share the vision of the Redbook committee that the upper-level general education courses would offer support, encouragement, and staffing to interesting courses, experimental courses, which were not specialized enough to interest any single department. Where these critics differ from the Redbook committee is in their vision of the required lower-level courses as an opportunity to offer all this, plus a captive audience...
...year history, the line has not once been on government subsidy, last year carried 80,000 transatlantic passengers, twice the number it flew in 1953. Icelandic, which is owned by 700 Icelanders, is content with its small share of a big and growing market. Says Managing Director Alfred Eliasson: "We have no desire to kill any of the Goliaths, but wish only to continue living in the image of David in peaceful coexistence with the Philistines...
...Iron Curtain countries have learned at least one time-honored tactic of capitalistic competition: a surefire way to win business is to chop prices below those of your competitors. For more than a year, West European shipping lines have watched helplessly as East-bloc ships captured a growing share of European cargoes by underbidding established rates by as much...
...come back and say what is wrong. He hasn't resigned and come back to say what he thinks is wrong." Barry Goldwater was less delicate in assigning responsibility to Lodge for the mess in South Viet Nam. Lodge, he said, had "balled things up" and "has to share whatever blame there is." Some Embarrassing Moments. Both Rockefeller and Goldwater had some embarrassing moments during their New Hampshire campaigning last week...
...begin with, the most accurate and comprehensive study that has been done of Auden. The author had access to biographical materials and manuscripts that have not been available to others, and he has read Auden unbelievably carefully. He had difficulties, however, which other critics and biographers do not share. His subject is far from dead: he is alive and still writing copiously. Consequently Spears had to ask himself how much biographical material he could judiciously include without appearing to pry at the poet's private life. Furthermore, if he wants to write another book on Auden later...