Word: non-communist
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...Socialist Front Populaire; fighting Franco, Laval and Hitler, he worked alongside the Communists. The Germans interned him in a castle in Bavaria during World War II. When he returned, he found that the Communists had moved into the C.G.T. like moths. He had to accept a Communist as "co-secretary general." For a time Jouhaux put up with the comrades, but by the end of 1947, he saw that he was simply being used as a respectable front. Reluctantly, he and his non-Communist colleagues pulled out of the powerful C.G.T., which he had bossed for 38 years. They...
...Paris, L'Observateur thought it heard war cries from across the Atlantic, and it didn't like them. What alarmed the leftish (but non-Communist), highbrow weekly was Collier's fictional account of World War III (TIME, Oct. 29). L'Observateur diagnosed the Collier's issue as a symptom of a general U.S. psychoneurosis, lampooned the Collier's act, showed Russia winning World War III. L'Ob-servateur's most striking illustration: a drawing of General Eisenhower surrendering to a Russian officer. Said I'Observateur: Collier's "rendered a great...
...liberal Republicans joined to push through the Administration's program for the defense of Western Europe. Most important: the Senate's resolution approving the dispatch of four additional U.S. divisions to Germany; the $7.3 billion appropriation to provide arms and economic aid for Western Europe, non-Communist Asia, the Middle East and Latin America. On resolutions demanding a clear-cut anti-Communist policy on China, conservative Republicans, liberal Republicans, Southern Democrats and even Fair Dealers joined. The two Republican blocs insisted, by resolution, that strategic use be made of Spain, Western Germany, Greece and Turkey. On rearmament...
...must bring Joseph Stalin under his influence ... At Teheran the President made various promises and commitments to Joe. Still determined but... weakened in mind and body, Roosevelt went ... to meet Stalin at Yalta. There he made still further commitments from which our country and the rest of the non-Communist world may never recover. A few weeks later he was dead-his ambition unattained...
...purely political move, it is granted that the nomination of the general would be a knockout . . . [But] General Eisenhower is now engaged in European work of tremendous importance to the safety of this and other non-Communist countries ... his weight is needed in Europe to facilitate the prevention, through preparedness, of a third World War which would have consequences too terrible to contemplate . . . No political aspirations on the part of others should take the general from his work...