Word: en
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...keep us out of war, but if war must come, let us not draw a line and say that beyond that line is a sanctuary which the enemy may occupy...We would be the laughingstock of mankind if we said we would not interfere until we saw the en-my actually putting his foot on the shore of Formosa...
...overwhelming congressional endorsement of President Eisenhower's historic message proved, among other things, that men of quite divergent attitudes found in it evidences to support their stoutly held positions. Senator Knowland could see a line drawn and a determination to stand firm in Asia. Premier Chou En-lai denounced it loudly as "a barefaced war cry" and a "brazen threat of agression." But to Britain's Sir Anthony Eden, who has made a fine art of picking out what he finds most useful in others' policies, the key Eisenhower phrases were: "We would welcome action...
...declaration Sir Anthony had been waiting for, and working for. To some State Department officials, the President's mention of a U.N.-sponsored cease-fire meant only that "you've got to show sympathy to the idea of stopping the shooting," and they confidently counted on Chou En-lai to reject...
John K. Fairbank '29, professor of History, said that Eisenhower's request put the United States in a strong position by advocating a cease-fire under United Nations suspices, especially in view of Chinese Communist Premier Chou En Lai's subsequent rejection of this approach...
Game of Love (Franco-London; Times Film Corp.) is a good little French picture based on a 1923 novel by Colette called Le Blé en Herbe. The typically Colettish plot: a 16-year-old boy named Phil (Pierre-Michel Beck) and his mother share a summer home on the Brittany beach with 15-year-old Vinca (Nicole Berger) and her family. The coltish youngsters love their summer lives, although, as they emerge from childhood, they begin to feel the prickly pain of petty jealousies. Into Phil's, life there comes a mature woman (Edwige Feuill...