Word: fulbrights
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...whelming majority" of reporters, he claims, exhibits a "cynical faddishness" that has not characterized the reporting of any previous U.S. war. "Today's average correspondent prefers a piece that will make people squirm and agonize. The war is being covered primarily for all bleeding hearts and for Senator Fulbright, who casts about for a way to stop it by frightening and shocking the citizenry. It is not being reported for simple souls who would like to know how it is being fought and how good are the chances that the South Vietnamese and American forces and their allies...
...proposals from the Philippines, South Korea, Thailand and South Viet Nam. No sooner was the meeting announced than it came under a withering crossfire of criticism. Moscow Radio dismissed it as "a propaganda stunt," the G.O.P. as a political gimmick. In one of his less becoming sneers, Senator William Fulbright dubbed it a meaningless palaver among "a cozy little group of our boys...
...million people, and it is claimed that 70% of that audience is made up of adults. One particularly popular news special, such as Pope Paul's visit to the U.S. last year, can easily focus the attention of 150 million viewers. Even at the dullest point of the Fulbright hearings on Viet Nam, several million people were tuned...
...plea for a continued U.S. presence in Asia (see ESSAY). "Today we send our sons in total commitment to South Viet Nam on an errand of mercy, although we face the retaliation of armed Communism in our own land," he said. Eying Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman J. William Fulbright who sat-on his hands -a few rows away, he said: "We note a hesitancy, some frustration and doubts in America" about...
...Deception. In Congress, where roughly one-fifth of the House and one-third of the Senate remain opposed to the war, most of the critics feel that their efforts have been futile, and have fallen silent. The most articulate of the antiwar Senators, Foreign Relations Committee Chairman J. William Fulbright, concedes that the voices of dissent have not generated much volume. Last week he warned Moscow, Peking and Hanoi that they would be "grievously deceiving themselves if they underestimated the militant spirit" in the U.S. "I don't believe the President is isolated," said Fulbright. "The Congress is more...