Word: lippmann
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...President now thrives on the hardest work of his life. His early-morning routine has changed little: awake at 7:30; a quick but thorough go at the Washington and New York papers (he reads Columnists Clapper and Lippmann regularly); breakfast of scrambled eggs, bacon, toast and milk; then, propped in bed in his year-round lightweight, solid-color pajamas, with a blue cape around his shoulders, a chat with his secretaries on the day's schedule. Despite their best efforts and the President's recurring resolutions to cut down, his daily list of callers always seems...
...never know it to read the books written by the intellectuals of 1942 and 1943. Charles Beard (The Republic), Peter Drucker (The Future of Industrial Man), Hamilton Basso (Mainstream), Herbert Agar (A Time for Greatness), Henry Wallace (The Century of the Common Man), James Truslow Adams (The American), Walter Lippmann (whose The Good Society, originally published in 1937, has just been reissued with a new preface), and Isabel Paterson (The God of the Machine) have all taken part in what might be called a new constitutional convention of the spirit. They have been busy conducting such an argument about "rights...
...Cycle? To most Americans it is almost unthinkable that Franklin Roosevelt could lose in 1944. But not so to Columnist Walter Lippmann, never rash, who calmly handed the 1944 election over to the Republicans. His reasons...
...presented Freedom House's first annual award for service to freedom to Pundit Walter Lippmann. In a speech he urged more general discussion of foreign policy, warning that the subject is too important "for us blindly to delegate its conduct to a few specialists...
...easy to identify them with the beliefs of Dr. James Shotwell, Clarence Streit, Ely Culbertson, Wendell Willkie, Herbert Agar, Pearl Buck and others. The weakness of this foreign-policy symposium derives from its satirical intent, which is not in keeping with The Republic as a whole. Walter Lippmann, for example, could undoubtedly make out a good case for an Anglo-American understanding in support of Beard's "continentalism" (especially as it involves defending the sea approaches to Latin America). But Beard does not let his opponents use the brains which at least one or two of them have...