Word: transcript
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...rude reprimand of her ... I have no intention to forget so easily that which is being done against me ... I ask you therefore that you weigh carefully whether you are agreeable to retracting your words and apologizing or whether you prefer the severance of relations between us." (Says the transcript at this point: Commotion in the hall...
...Corpse") Soler, who is under indictment for the murder of an anti-Trujillo Dominican exile in Havana last summer. Gangster Soler said that in 1953 a "Trujillo agent" offered him $100,000 to kill Galindez, but he found the job "too risky." The New York police sent for a transcript and prepared to delve into the background of the incident, hoping to find a solid lead, but the final solution to the Galindez mystery still seems as distant as ever...
...stones based on a garbled leak from a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing, the Washington press corps propagated the apparently indestructible myth that Wilson said: "What's good for General Motors is good for the country." The official transcript of the hearing released later, showed that what Wilson really said was: "I thought what was good for our country was good for General Motors, and vice versa. But the impact of the first stories was never overcome by the fact, and probably never will be. To its credit, the Washington Post reported the story correctly from the start...
...rewarding the unusually intelligent student who has no desire to spend a good part of his senior year on a narrowly defined project. Seemingly, the reward of getting A's should be enough for those who do not wish to continue in the academic life, and if a grade transcript is not enough for the exceptional, a Phi Beta Kappa key would sufficiently represent to society one's undergraduate achievements. Honors in General Studies, merely as a reward for high grades, is a perversion of the Honors degree, and can become a too easy escape from a thesis rather than...
Even the Atomic Energy Commission's special review board did not find Oppenheimer disloyal, although the board, by a 2-1 vote, recommended his discharge from Government employment as a security risk. The transcript of the hearings clearly shows that Oppenheimer did have close ties to Communist movements from 1939 to 1942, that he did tell the F.B.I. a "pure fabrication" in 1943, and that he did continue to associate with people he had known were Communists. The board, however, found "no evidence of disloyalty" in any of Oppenheimer's actions and added that "an alternative recommendation would be possible...