Word: feuds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Colombia's backlands blood feud between Liberals and Conservatives goes on, only partly muffled by the iron censorship of President Gustavo Rojas Pinilla. Last week, from Strongman Rojas himself, came a communique on the fighting. In one of his rare press interviews, he told the Chicago Daily News's John B. McDermott that this year the struggle has cost 2,000 or more lives...
...major shooting scrape in the continuing California political feud between Vice President Richard Nixon and Governor Goodwin J. Knight came on Aug. 8, 1954, in their fight for control of the Republican State Central Committee. Knight won hands down, installing his men both as chairman and vice chairman, largely because many of the committee members are appointed by state legislators who are notoriously sensitive to the governor's patronage and his veto power over their pet bills. Since then, it has been generally taken for granted that "Goodie" Knight could do much as he liked with the State Central...
...turned up on the noisiest and brashest of Manhattan's tabloids, the scandal-shrieking Evening-Graphic, where Walter Winchell was beginning his labors in the vineyard of gossip. The meeting of Sullivan and Winchell was explosive. Out of their four years together on the Graphic grew a feud that lasts to this day. Says Ed: "Winchell's all through-and I'm an expert on Winchelliana. I've followed him like a hawk. He's a dead duck. He couldn't be resuscitated by injections at half-hour intervals...
...obviously, is Vice President Richard Nixon, who is 42. The Vice President would move into the race with two main handicaps : 1) a long Democratic smear campaign against Nixon, which will be used in his own party as evidence that he is a poor candidate; and 2) a personal feud with the key political figure in his own state, Governor Good win J. Knight, who will probably control the California delegation to the Republican National Convention. While Nixon is widely known and well liked by a great number of G.O.P. leaders around the country, the extent of his strength would...
...electioneering was successful. Appearing for the first time after a summer of well-publicized tiffing. Funsters Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis were so busy patching up their feud that they mostly forgot to be funny. For the second week in a row Thornton Wilder proved himself TV's most adaptable playwright...