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Word: loyal (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Walter C. Carrington '52 1L presented "the students' view on investigations." Veide, he said, "has recently admitted that 99.9 percent of the teachers are loyal and it appears that he is looking for the disloyal one-tenth percent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Howe Asks Called Faculty to Talk; HLU Scores Council for Not Acting | 3/26/1953 | See Source »

...Rutgers, issued an open invitation to all loyalty investigators. With an almost incredible show of naivete, Jones said the current Congressional investigations into education, "would show the public what we are like." Investigators, if given a free run of campuses, would find "the overwhelming majority of our professors outstandingly loyal," said Jones, and relay this information to the public...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Wolf at the Door | 3/24/1953 | See Source »

...Flowers, boasts filming entirely in Austria, made possible only through the protection of the United States Army. An attempted satire on Communism, the film becomes unhappily serious whenever "the land of equal opportunity" is mentioned. The story, a continuous string of clumsy propaganda incidents, relates the seduction of a loyal party woman to the wonders of the West. The seduction is embodied in a handsome, disloyal Russian with a De Pinna sportcoat, a Hollywood apartment, and a stack of bourgeois magazines...

Author: By Michael O. Finkelstein, | Title: Mississippi Gambler | 3/19/1953 | See Source »

...affairs." But after a word with Cheka Boss Dzerzhinsky about the affairs of Rabkrin and Orgburo, Lenin added a postscript: "Stalin . . . becomes unbearable in the office of General Secretary ... I propose to the comrades to find a way to remove Stalin . . . and appoint another man . . . more patient, more loyal, more polite and more attentive to comrades, less capricious, etc." Two months later Lenin had a third stroke which left him paralyzed, without the power of speech...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Death In The Kremlin: Killer of the Masses | 3/16/1953 | See Source »

...softened the program. Even today the peasants maintain a hold on the country's economy. There never have been enough staunch Communists to create party cells in all of Russia's scores of thousands of small villages. Many "collectivized" villages are in fact tight family communities, loyal to their family interests. Hence Stalin's effort in 1949 to amalgamate the villages into large, well-policed agricultural towns, called agrogoroda. The attempt was quietly abandoned. Russia needs more & more bread for her expanding industrial cities. To the end. Stalin dared not risk another setback like that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Death In The Kremlin: Killer of the Masses | 3/16/1953 | See Source »

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