Word: unless
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Snapped Nehru: "The Congress Party is weak and getting weaker." While his sweating partymen squirmed in their chairs, Nehru lashed out at party factionalism, internal squabbles, the ever-widening gap between the party and the people. "Our strong point," said Nehru, "is the past. Unless we get out of our present rut, the Congress Party is doomed...
Yearbooks are all alike in their tedium, and no one likes them, unless it is Mother. Each year the editors of these publications rack their brains for something "new." Inevitably, much the same thing issues forth. This year the novelty, according to the editors, is what is called "an editorial approach midway between the reportorial and the historical." "Yearbook writers," they say, "found themselves going beyond the dry facts to set down on paper the atmosphere of Harvard ... the Yearbook has presumed for itself a journalistic role rarely associated with college annual, that of interpreter as well as recorder...
This Administration has accomplished nothing more than passing the meaningless Middle East doctrine. It is not the role of Congress to lead, and even Lyndon Johnson and the boys are coming around to this view. The democrats are no longer willing to fight for Eisenhower's program, unless he will get in the fight...
...required to evaporate the ice crystals. This heat must reach the center of the material, and in the case of most foods the evaporation of crystals near the surface forms a layer of corklike stuff that is an excellent insulator. It keeps heat of sublimation from reaching the interior unless the surface temperature is raised so high that the food spoils...
...chief responsibility for obtaining skilled workers and constantly upgrading their skills rests on industry itself. Today most employers realize that they are in an emergency, that they can no longer get their skilled workers by pirating them from other companies, and that the shortage will get worse unless industry assumes leadership in overcoming it. Labor Secretary James Mitchell estimates that to the 9,000,000 skilled workers in the U.S. must be added another 5,000,000 more skilled or semiskilled workers by 1965; otherwise the economy will fall short of the $560 billion gross national product expected in that...