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Word: moynihanized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...York is the payoff--Jackson did well in Massachusetts, and about as expected in Florida--but will Moynihan's endorsement play in Rochester? More than one liberal Democrat is worried about Jackson's foreign policy--their line is that Scoop's the one to start World War III. Jackson still has some liabilities from his bald-eagle stance of the Vietnam years. And yesterday three labor leaders, including Victor Gottbaum in New York, former Bayh campaigners, came out for Udall...

Author: By Thomas S. Blanton, | Title: Death Valley Went for Reagan | 3/13/1976 | See Source »

Carmichael also said he thought the endorsement of Jackson this week from Daniel P. Moynihan, professor of Government, played a major part in the Jackson victory. "They even love Moynihan down in the south now," he said...

Author: By Mark T. Whitaker, | Title: Harvard Students Active in Primaries | 3/3/1976 | See Source »

...were once Socialists, and their previous method, if not their conclusions, persists. Moreover, the Public Interest conservatives refuse to identify their cause with the status-anxious "little man," which Rightists from the late Tom Watson to George Wallace have attempted to do. Befitting high-level academics--Daniel Patrick Moynihan is among the contributors to "The American Commonwealth, 1976"--theirs is an elitist rightism. Like John Adams, the traditionalist of colonial days, they seem to have no greater fear than that of King...

Author: By Jim Kaplan, | Title: King Mob | 3/2/1976 | See Source »

...positively obsessed with them, and also with Jerry Brown (whom he feels represents a new fascist politics of scarcity), and Jimmy Carter (totally bogus), and C.L. Sulzberger, the major foreign policy voice for Cockburn's "Center Right Coalition," an auspicious group including the likes of Daniel P. Moynihan, Marty Peretz, and half the Harvard faculty...

Author: By Jim Kaplan and Richard Turner, S | Title: Pulp | 2/19/1976 | See Source »

Good Man. As soon as Moynihan quit, Ronald Reagan started making him a campaign issue. Isn't it too bad, Reagan told an audience in southern Florida, that the Administration could not keep such a good man? "He was the first ambassador saying a lot of things to those jokers up there that should be said." However, no one emerged from the Moynihan affair with very much credit. The ambassador appeared to be excessively petulant. Kissinger looked like a man who had undermined a valuable if hard-to-handle ambassador. And the President, still wounded by the recent resignation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Pat's Acupuncture | 2/16/1976 | See Source »

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