Word: mentioned
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...armor of Senator Lodge. A big one is his endorsement of McCarthyism. Either a candidate is smart enough to see the implications of McCarthy, or he isn't. If he does see them, he is faced with the choice of endorsing them or keeping his mouth shut, not to mention active opposition. Senator Lodge is smart enough to see what McCarthyism means. We must read his support of the Wisconsin Senator as plain-vote-getting expediency, nothing else. The same applies to his happy acceptance of Dick Nixon's praise on platforms throughout Massachusetts. What does this say about...
...sorry to see in your Oct. 6 "News in Pictures" a photo with the caption "Merry Christmas!" Do you not think that our Communist opponents will have every right to call the U.S. a "warmongering conglomeration of assassins" (definition used by Nikita Khrushchev, whom you mention in another section of the same issue) if we display "rocket guns, interplanetary ships," even "jet-propelled Santa Claus" as toys for our kids? Have we got to indoctrinate the youngest generation with the terrors of warfare? Would not an old-fashioned Santa Claus with a red suit and white beard do all right...
...best face on the decision when it came and acclaimed the board's "real courage." Lewis lumbered into a strategy huddle with his top aides, lumbered out again to deliver his pro-Democrat oration as promised ("cast aside and push away . . . the alluring Republican names"), without a mention of the WSB decision...
...Peking they sent Premier Tsedenbal, where (on orders from the Kremlin) he got the kind of welcome given only to the head of a sovereign state. Tsedenbal signed a ten-year treaty with Red China pledging cultural, economic and educational exchanges. No mention was made of a military alliance, thus underlining the fact that Outer Mongolia's only military connections are with the Soviet Union. At lavish banquets celebrating the pact, Premier Tsedenbal toasted both Mao and Stalin, but for every toast honoring Mao, the "great leader of the Chinese people," there were at least six eulogies of Stalin...
...there might be some cause for the doctors' trepidation. But Stevenson has said, "I am against the socialization of the practice of medicine as much as I would be against the socialization of my own profession, the law." When the Governor suggested that the Democratic convention make no mention of compulsory health insurance in its platform, his party obliged. Clearly, then, the AMA doctors fear no strangulation of free enterprise in the medical field no matter who is elected...