Word: brickering
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LANDMARKS OF MAPMAKING by R. V. Tooley and Charles Bricker. 276 pages. Elsevier (distributed by the New York Graphic Society...
...Nancy Brenner, housewife 317 204 1080 1450 John Begley, ass't. prof. 419 328 1320 1680 Ann Bucken, student 229 208 864 696 Michael Bucken, student 181 185 1440 1380 Walter Bucken, orthodont. 302 292 672 600 Michael Benson, student 198 174 1000 1933 Robert Bricker, mechanic 232 174 2015 2610 William Greenan, service 385 348 2240 2610 Ruth Hiltebeitel, student 672 682 2316 2427 Brenda Hughes, student 317 232 2304 1450 John Hynes, service 432 348 1248 2088 John Kenny, student 384 290 1648 2000 Dennis Morrill, student 528 348 2400 1873 George Morrison, ass't. prof...
Amid this growing discontent, Congressional opponents of the war could have gone much farther in drafting them. They might have proposed new Constitutional restrictions on the Presidency--a rash technique tried 14 years ago when the Bricker Amendment limiting the President's treaty-making power met narrow defeat. To tie the President's hands for all time would have been a mistake then, and would...
...years in the Senate, Young has been one of its most liberal members. His first feat, and by no means his least, was the unseating of Senator John W. Bricken in 1958. Few Ohio Democrats--none of consequence, anyway--had wanted to take Bricker on, and the 69-year-old Young won the nomination by default. During the campaign, he tried to use Bricker's conservatism for all it was worth, or not worth ("My opponent is John W. Bricker, the darling of the reactionaries."), and, to the surprise of one and all, he won the election handily...
...badly out of date and still behave as though the neutral nations were major considerations in the cold war." Galbraith characterizes U.S. foreign policy in general as overly cautious and boring. "It seems that our policy is in the hands of men whose mothers were frightened by John W. Bricker," he says. No one knows for sure just what that sentence means, but it sounds great on the playing fields of academe...