Word: suggesters
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Council will suggest that only honors candidates be considered and that fields which ordinarily give general exams in the junior year postpone these tests until the senior year...
...suggest that students be permitted to place from one to four bursar's cards, an order for additional tickets, one a self-addressed envelope in the H.A.A. office. Seniors could leave their envelopes in the office on Mondays, Sophomores on Tuesdays, etc. The charge for additional tickets should be placed on the term bill, and the processed envelopes could be mailed back to the student with his bursar's card and tickets in one day. This plan might be used to supplement the present "personalized" system, or it might replace it entirely...
...experiencing a probationary period, and that eventual election or rejection will turn on the performances rendered during this trial period. Professional achievement alone warrants an invitation to participate. The eligible in question was peremptorily denied an opportunity to prove his ability to work honestly for the Review. You suggest that the eligible's own testimony before a public board of inquiry is sufficiently condemnatory to preclude the possibility of honest effort for the organ. Verdict before trial may be an incident of some legal system you espouse; fortunately, it is foreign...
...with this problem. The real issue is whether the self-styled judges who took the peremptory action of refusal have promulgated, accepted, and administered some novel procedure during a single tenure whereby they achieve the sole discretionary power of rejection without review. It is neither inapt nor impertinent to suggest that, if the issue is answered in the affirmative, the political system under which the Review functions has profound similarities with that system the editors propose is the altar on which the eligible in question burns holy incense. The Review achieves in the field of its own forum the very...
This theory was meeting violent opposition from the "more chrome on the bumper" boys. Said Navy Secretary Robert Anderson last week at the Marine Corps school at Quantico: "The increasing power of the atomic bomb suggests to me that the need for improvement of the more conventional forms of warfare may well become greater, rather than less, as we approach absoluteness in mass-destruction weapons... It may well be that the presence of such fearful weapons may act as a deterrent to their use by either side. Should the superweapons thus cancel themselves out-and I suggest to you that...