Word: wings
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Beard, Philosopher James Harvey Robinson and Economists Wesley Mitchell and Alvin Johnson-who felt that Columbia limited their freedom to teach unconventional courses and express unpopular views. By the early '30s, the New School had gained a certain vogue as a center of night-school uplift for left-wing intellectuals. It acquired new academic respectability in the mid-'30s by creating a "University in Exile" on the talents of about 50 European scholars who had fled fascism in Germany and Italy and formed a Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science at the New School...
...world's first nuclear weapon. It was a task he discharged brilliantly, and then in peacetime, as chief adviser to the A.E.G., turned around to argue bitterly against carrying on with the vastly more powerful hydrogen bomb. His stand, along with disclosure of his past left-wing association, stirred a nationwide controversy that culminated in 1954 with the revocation of his security clearance, after which he returned to academe as director of Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study, seeking, as he recently said, "an understanding, both historical and philosophical, of what the sciences have brought human life...
Harvard held only a 4-2 lead after, the first period, on goals by defensemen Don Grimble, Tom Micheletti, and Bob Carr, and sophomore wing Barry Johnson. Indian goaltender Warren Cook was hard pressed to keep matters even that close, turning aside 22 shots. Over the same 20 minutes, Crimson goalie Bill Fitzsimmons was credited with but 2 saves...
Brown already had eight of its goals by that point, and they were all beauties. The first came at 4:01 of the first period when Devaney fed Macks charging down the left wing for an unstoppable shot. Two minutes later, with the Crimson a man down. Devaney perfectly deflected Bob Rockwood's shot from the point...
...Fokker. Since the Dutch company has already designed the plane and built its prototype, the F-28, Fairchild Miller's development costs will be shaved in half. In addition, the U.S. company will sell the F28 in the Western Hemisphere, purchase such F228 components as the tail assembly, wing segments and a shortened fuselage from the Dutch, and will use Rolls-Royce turbofan engines that have been specifically designed for the F-228. The company, as a result, hopes to keep its cost $1,000,000 below the $3,500,000 to $4,000,000 price tag of competing...