Word: morganization
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Bureaucratic Blackmail? Fluttering his eyelashes at the television cameras, Illinois' Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen was placed under oath and told how John Adams and White House Aide Gerald Morgan came to his office last Jan. 22 to urge against the subcommittee's calling Army loyalty panelists. It was then, Dirksen said, that he heard for the first time of the Cohn-Schine matter. Although he could not say that Adams actually tried to use the Cohn-Schine report as a club, Dirksen said that he had a "vague" recollection of "hints" in that direction, all of which caused...
Ambassador (and sometimes Presidential Adviser) Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. and White House Aide Gerald Morgan. Said the Army's John Adams: "At this meeting Governor Adams asked me if I had a written record of all the incidents with reference to Private Schine . . . and when I replied in the negative, he stated he thought I should prepare one." The names of Sherman Adams and Cabot Lodge sent the hearings careering off in new directions. One path led toward the President, the other toward Cabot Lodge, a favorite quarry for both Democrats and anti-Eisenhower Republicans, who still resent Lodge...
After a good many years of taking criticism by distinguished visiting scholars from Britain and Europe, Philosopher Douglas N. Morgan of Northwestern University decided it was time to complain. Last week, in a letter to the Manchester Guardian, he talked back. Fond as the U.S. is of visitors, said he, too many"come to America armed with a conviction that we are infants, that our academic degrees - not earned at Oxford or Cambridge - are travesties, and that even our graduate students are merely overgrown addicts of football and television...
...Quite honestly," says Morgan, "we can and do read. We can and do see paintings and hear music . . . During the past few years, American universities have paid out thousands of dollars to bring scholars. To speak bluntly, these scholars have all too often insulted our students and ourselves by presenting lectures which the most naive young instructor on our staff could give without any preparation . . . We cannot feel happy about spending our money to bring a distinguished guest one hundred or three thousand miles to hear him recite the alphabet...
...varsity put men on base in all but the third and eighth innings, but stranded 14. A three-base error by left-fielder Dick Hoffman and singles by Jack Kirkwood and Roger Morgan resulted in two Brandeis runs in the first inning. Four singles followed with a double by second baseman Harvey Littman brought three more tallies for the Judges in the top of the second...