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Adam B. Ulam, associate professor of Government, and Martin E. Malia, assistant professor of History, both said that the speech made no fundamental change in Marxian doctrine. Both mentioned that Marx, late in life, envisaged peaceful means of achieving the classless society. Malia emphasized that this was merely another attempt at neutralizing Western Europe and disrupting the NATO alliance. Ulam noted that the new doctrine implied no willingness to make genuine concessions to the West...

Author: By Ernest A. Ostro, | Title: Khrushchev's Anti-Marx Speech Draws Mixed Faculty Reactions | 2/17/1956 | See Source »

Views: Very early, he decided that the working classes succeed only in alliance with the middle class. He does not think in Marxian terms of class warfare, has incurred the enmity of the far left by demanding the expulsion of Communists from union leadership. Says he: "I want to see a society of equal men and women. I want everyone to have the opportunity of developing his personality to the full; I want fellowship and fraternity and I want to see these things achieved by democracy . . . These to me are Socialist ideas. Nationalization to me is a means...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: LABOR'S NEW LEADER | 12/26/1955 | See Source »

...supposition that many politicians draw from this is that labor support not only repels large segments of the voters unconnected with unions, but that unions also cannot rally their own members to any political standard they choose. The reasons for this lie in the non-Marxian sociology of the American workingman. Its implications point a warning to the leaders of the new labor federation. While Meany and Reuther may visualize the AFL-CIO as a vast new political fulcrum which can make politicians tremble and cause labor policies to be transformed into political action, the task ahead may be much...

Author: By I. DAVID Benkin, | Title: Dangerous Miracle | 12/15/1955 | See Source »

...despite the rather Marxian concept of perfection, containing for the imperfect artist the seeds of its own downfall, this play is not particularly startling or inflammatory. One must then ask if its general obscurity and murky symbolism are quite justified. Granting Arcadia its moments of brilliant imagery, and a really fine scene between the artist and his ex-mistress, the poetry is not, intrinsically, worth the effort of picking what is good from the shielding verbiage. Neither does the authoress, V. R. Lang, enjoy so glittering a reputation that one is compelled to find out just what she means. Another...

Author: By Robert J. Schoenberg, | Title: I Too Have Lived in Arcadia | 10/28/1954 | See Source »

...Imperialism" is a term that belongs in the Classical vocabulary of Communist abuse. If the Russians use it with exceptional skill, it is only because they have an appreciation of its meaning. For within the USSR lies an empire as diverse and far-flung as anything the pre-Marxian world could assemble. The Formation of the Soviet Union, by Richard Pipes of the Russian Research Center, is a study of this empire in the making. Along with the gross anatomy of acquisition, Pipes combines a more rewarding discussion of the physiology of the empire, tracing the course of the troublesome...

Author: By Robert A. Fish, | Title: Mute Empire | 10/20/1954 | See Source »

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