Word: non-communist
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...August 1950, Russian-born Ben Gold, president of the Red-dominated International Fur and Leather Workers Union, publicly renounced his 30-year membership in the Communist Party. Soon after, he signed the non-Communist oath, which the Taft-Hartley Act requires of all labor leaders whose unions want the all-important services of the National Labor Relations Board. Last week a federal grand jury in Washington, convinced by the Justice Department that Gold's conversion was no more than skin-deep, indicted him on the charge that he had perjured himself by signing the NLRB affidavit. Had the grand...
...second alternative, favored by Chief of State Bao Dai, now in Paris, will require time and a generous assignment of French officers to train the Vietnamese soldiers-something the French, whose officer cadres are already much depleted, are reluctant to do. The third alternative is vigorously opposed by non-Communist Indo-Chinese, who fear that Red flags will be flying in Hanoi and Saigon within hours of a political armistice. The non-Communist Indo-Chinese have their own plan: complete independence within the French Union. Without that, truce talk for them is premature and cowardly...
...whites while assistant superintendent of schools in Portland; 3) introduced in 1953 a banquet speaker who in 1945 had allegedly sponsored a dinner for Paul Robeson. Rogge claimed to represent hundreds of "taxpayers, school patrons and citizens," but refused te say who they were. Though the slur upon the non-Communist Urban League was obviously absurd, the board thought Rogge's charges required investigation, hired a firm of former...
There was a further danger. If the Communists continue to permit non-Communist reporters to take carefully controlled trips behind the Iron Curtain, the Western press may be fooled into believing that they are being allowed to see through the Iron Curtain, while, in fact, the curtain still shuts out almost as much real news as it ever...
...might be hard to persuade a South Korean that it was. Yet, in the world outside Korea, there was reason to believe that Communism lost more and gained less from the war than the rest of the world did. Comparing June 1953 with June 1950, the U.S. and the non-Communist world is, in many respects, in a stronger position in the cold war than it was on the day the Korean war began. One measure is rearmament...