Word: doped
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...organized in 1930 and has headed ever since. Last week Commissioner Anslinger, 62, a Pennsylvania Dutchman who knows more about the worldwide drug traffic than any other man on earth. reported to the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee a growing narcotic menace: Communist China's $60 million-a-year dope trade, deliberately and officially pursued to earn foreign exchange, "finance political activities, and spread addiction among free peoples...
Unlike the Chinese Nationalists, who executed as many as 1,000 dope dealers annually in their highly successful efforts to reduce dope addiction, the Communists, while forbidding drugs to party members, organized the National Trading Co. to distribute narcotics under Foreign Ministry supervision...
Commissioner Anslinger documented his report with details supplied by the bureau network of undercover agents abroad. He named Red China's new dope factories and brands (Camel, Race Horse, Red Lion, etc.). He outlined the smuggling system, from camelback to air transport...
...some 60,000 addicts) compared to one in 400 (300,000 addicts) in 1930. In Asia, however, Communist China's lucrative narcotic trade has vastly increased drug addiction. Japan, which had no recorded drug addicts until recent years, now has 25,000 or 30,000 entirely supplied by dope from Red China...
...state censers to ban the movie Desires on Sundays reveals the consistency of their policies, which we have often had the pleasure of seeing put into action. The movie begins at the presentation of a morality play at Salzburg. But soon the protagonists, a ballerina who is a helpless dope addict, a city health official who is a pillar of righteousness, and happy family owing a pharmacy, are entangled in the problem of good and evil. Through a series of decisions the latter characters conquer the evil which grips the ballerina and involves, by extension, all mankind. Their morality...