Word: acceptance
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...tell, is no longer a "mess." Candidate Eisenhower has been President Eisenhower for four years, and his own political philosophy is part of the printed record. And it is a philosophy that qualifies as "liberal." It is clear from public statements that Eisenhower does personally believe in and accept reciprocal trade, a form of federal aid to education, a program of national health insurance, foreign economic aid and the peaceful use of atomic power for the benefit of the whole world, a more liberal immigration law, equal rights for all, Social Security, and America's international obligations and the United...
...foreign gains achieved under 20 years of Democratic rule. Candidate Eisenhower promised in 1952 that he would not turn the clock back, and he did not. What concerns us now, however, is that the time for consolidation has passed: those of he Old Guard who are going to accept this government's international and domestic obligations have done so; for the others, we can't wait all day. For four years this country has marked time to let the rear guard come barely into view. Four years is enough. It is now time to be once again on the march...
When will TIME accept-even grudgingly-the fact that Harry Truman is no longer a candidate for the presidency? Harry and his "rascals" were evicted several years ago. According to TIME'S quaint type of thought...
...announced that it would try to eliminate the problem by setting up a "facility" of its own to accommodate the 100 Percenters. But would not membership in the facility still carry a stigma? In an earnest effort to avoid that, Sophomore Vice President Robert Hillier announced that he would accept no bids from any club, but would join the university's facility and bring "60 or 70 of the good men in the class" along with him. "Everyone's afraid that the facility will become a dumping ground," said he. "Someone has to make the move to destroy...
West Germany's reluctance, voiced by Konrad Adenauer, to accept a military draft is but a symptom, though an important one, of feelings in France and Holland. Adenauer reasons that if America can afford to institute a manpower cut that will spell pulling out of our European bases, Germany need not meet its violently unpopular quota of 500,000 men in arms...