Word: type
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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When a student becomes personally involved with the war, he experiences a type of frustration which is unusual for the affluent. To them the war is wrong and it seems like nothing can be done about it. The distinct possibility of being sent to Vietnam to die brings home the feeling of powerlessness and awareness of the student's inability to control his own fate...
Beyond the Balance Sheet. Only recently has the need for Chesham-type professionalism been recognized in Britain. Unlike their American counterparts, few big businesses in England can afford to employ full-time experts on mergers and acquisitions. Often the merger is a part-time endeavor of a few executives who lack the necessary expertise beyond the balance sheet to understand the long-range implications of the match. For this reason, Stacey estimates that between 1948 and 1960 about one-half of Britain's mergers turned sour. "Happily," says Stacey, "golf-club gossip and chance encounters between principals of businesses...
...final paragraph of the article 'From Dissent to Resistance" which appeared on Page 2 of yesterday's Crimson, was rendered incomprehensible by the omission of a line of type. It should have read...
...Committee have expressed similar attitudes, some of them more direct. One member, William O'Connor, has made public utterances as can leave no possible uncertainty as to what he thinks of Negro children: "We have no inferior education in our schools. What we have been getting is an inferior type of student...
Died. Stanley Morison, 78, British typographer, designer of Times New Roman, one of the world's most widely used type faces; after a long illness; in London. Compiler of several definitive histories of typography, Morison set out in 1932 to develop for the London Times, a type face that would be "masculine, English, direct, simple, and absolutely free from faddishness." His design was all he promised, and was adopted by the Times and literally thousands of other publications, including TIME...