Word: stuart
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Stuart Hughes, professor of History, called the U.S. action "the least justifiable foreign policy action the U.S. has taken in recent history." Hughes added that to his knowledge," neither the President nor anyone else has presented solid evidence that the movement has been taken over by the Communists. Bosch would have made a better leader than anyone presently on the horizon...
Other Harvard members of the Com- mittee include George H. Williams, Hollis Professor of Divinity; Henry D. Aiken, professor of Philosophy; Ralph F. Baierlcin '58, instructor in Physics; David F. Cavers, Fessenden Professor of Law; H. Stuart Hughes, professor of History; and Everett I. Mendelsohn, assistant professor of the History of Science
Something Was Missing. Although seminary deans keep on the watch for failures seeking to escape the hardships of life through the church, they find that most older men are genuinely responding to calls they cannot escape. Layne, for example, spent three years wrestling with his decision. President Stuart LeRoy Anderson of the Pacific School of Religion observes that many applicants are "dissatisfied with whatever fields they are in because they deal only with materialistic things. They would rather give their lives to investigating the significance of life." The Rev. William Clancey, once an assistant U.S. attorney in San Francisco, says...
...Stuart Hughes, professor of History, will become acting chairman of the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies next year while Stanley H. Hoffmann, professor of Government, is on sabbatical. Hughes will retain his post as chairman of the Committee on Degrees in History and Literature...
...failure of this effort was followed in the fall of 1962, by the spectacular defeat of H. Stuart Hughes in his Senate race against Edward M. Kennedy '54. The President's successful handling of the Cuban crisis further isolated the peace organizations throughout the country. In addition the growing civil rights movement was becoming a severe drain on the funds and enthusiasm of the peace groups, and by the fall of 1963 Tocsin was virtually dead. Last fall, after a year's gap, the Vietnamese crisis seemed to provide a rallying cry once again, and the peace forces regrouped under...