Word: luce
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...Republican side, carpetbagging was not the issue, but there was plenty of dissidence nonetheless. Incumbent Keating, with big convention send-offs from Governor Nelson Rockefeller, Senator Jacob Javits, Dick Nixon and Tom Dewey, received his party's nomination by acclamation. Only the day before, Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce had declined the New York Conservative Party's invitation to run as a third Senate candidate -one who might easily draw enough votes away from Keating to cause his defeat...
...Still Hopeful." There is no assurance yet that the coming campaign will deal only with a Kennedy-Keating race, for it may well be that a third candidate will join the battle. Former Congresswoman Clare Boothe Luce announced last week that she would accept the New York State Conservative Party's invitation to run for the Senate on its ticket. So doing, she added: "I am still hopeful, as is the Conservative Party state leadership, that unity will be achieved behind the Goldwater-Miller ticket in New York." One way to achieve that unity would be for Governor Nelson...
...view with variations had its adherents across the Atlantic. In a commencement address at St. John's University in Jamaica, L.I., former U.S. Ambassador to Italy Clare Boothe Luce warned that Red China, now "isolated militarily and economically by both U.S.S.R. and U.S. policy," might turn desperately aggressive. In Southeast Asia, said she, "we must hold firm even if it becomes necessary to wield a nuclear stick over the head of Mao Tse-tung." But, added Speaker Luce, there are other ways to stop Chinese expansionism. "For example, what argument can be made for our present policy of trading...
Clare Boothe Luce, playwright, former Congresswoman, former Ambassador to Italy-LL.D. For her distinctive contribution as a woman in the field of international affairs...
...colleagues in the Time & Life Building and at Time Inc. offices around the world, the choice of Donovan as editor-in-chief came as no surprise. In his staff memo, Henry Luce recalled that when he appointed Donovan editorial director he thought it "a brilliant stroke all my own." But the first Time Inc. executive he met that day said matter-of-factly: "It was obvious-inevitable." So was last week's appointment. As his predecessor said: "Donovan has earned the professional respect and the personal confidence of all who have worked with...