Word: kaies
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...exercise, smiled indulgently as a rider in a wig and tricornered hat arrived on his way to warn Lexington the British were coming. He kept right on smiling as a band of anti-Taft Harvard students hoisted placards proclaiming a Taft cabinet: Joe McCarthy for Attorney General, Chiang Kai-shek as Secretary of State, General MacArthur as Secretary of Defense, Fred Hartley (of Taft-Hartley) as Secretary of Labor, and Ohio's Senator John Bricker as Secretary of Commerce...
When the student had completed his unappreciated task, Taft mounted the steps and, to the tune of The Beautiful Ohio, shook hands all around. Instantly brash placards erupted from the crowd, identifying one idea of what kind of cabinet Taft would choose; Mac-Arthur for Defense Secretary, Chiang-Kai-Shek for State Secretary, and so on. Taft, too busy charting his way through the confusion on the platform, ignored the suggestions...
Then a number of signs were quickly raised in the audience. Roy Gootenberg, teaching fellow in Government, held a sign saying, "If you are elected, will this be your cabinet?" Other placards said, General Douglas MacArthur, Secretary of Defense; Chiang Kai-Shek, Secretary of State, and Senator Joe McCarthy, Atterney General...
...case, its current editorials calmly discuss recent primary results--in terms of a voter rebellion against the Democratic New Deal and Casaristic elements in the groundswell for Eisenhower. Other editorials criticize President Truman for allowing his loyalty to General Marshall to overide professions of sympathy with Chiang Kai-shek, and complain that the current Wage Stabilization program has union leanings...
...magazine has finally gathered the facts and published them in a compendium of the China Lobby's growth, personnel, activities, and connections. In its latest issues, The Reporter has proven the Lobby's presence on the Washington landscape and has detailed its attempts to further the cause of Chiang-kai Shek. The articles published so far lack the invective, the denunciatory tone, and the indignant cries of betrayal that one might expect in a treatment of so controversial a subject, and instead permits the facts to render their impression unadorned...