Word: step-by-step
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Since the first duty of any department is to meet the needs of its concentrators, the chemistry faculty must assure its students adequate preparation to withstand national competition. To this end, it has arranged a sequence of courses to be followed with little variation, a step-by-step arrangement common to most sciences. In chemistry, however, the large number of required lab hours further limit the student's academic freedom, and unless he chooses chemistry upon entering college, he will be over-whelmed by his later schedule. Running contrary to the University policy of letting the Freshman browse...
...Wallace asserted that the U.S. is trying to force down the throats of the other powers an indefinite "step-by-step" control process which all the nations must swallow before the U.S. will share its technical knowledge with the world...
Said Baruch: It is the stated intention of the U.S. to put the "step-by-step" process on a definite time schedule; the great powers, including Russia, agreed fully to this principle at the Moscow Conference...
...time the conference met in secret session to hammer out its program there was little doubt what it would be. The main points, as expected: 1) a Wallace-inspired foreign policy (withdraw U.S. troops from China; combat "imperialism" wherever found; extend economic aid to war-devastated countries; eliminate the step-by-step proposal of the Baruch atom control plan); a New Dealing domestic policy (price & rent controls; a federal civil rights bill; extended social security; minimum wages; soak-the-rich taxation); 3) a resolution applauding Henry Wallace. A permanent committee of 50 would be appointed after the November...
Veto Trouble. Mr. Baruch said that if all goes well the U.S. will cease making bombs, "dispose of" existing bombs, and turn over its know-how to ADA. It will give up superiority in a gradual, step-by-step procedure if other nations sign the ADA charter-and if, in matters covered by the charter, they give up the one-power veto which now prevents penalizing any member of the Big Five unless all concur. Baruch proposed "condign punishments" for violations, which would be "stigmatized as international crimes." and he said that punishment must not be avoided...