Word: organizing
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...brusque official decrees that cut Paulino down were shock enough for the readers of Trujillo's house-organ daily, El Caribe, which always before had only lavish praise (Paulino had been the paper's publisher). Going on from there in editorials El Caribe gave some details on just how the "truculent, ambitious and aggressive ex-functionary," the "bad collaborator of the Chief," had come to grief...
...Evanston. Much of the Evanston debate went on in Northwestern University's McGaw Hall, where delegates sat under high, bare steel arches. Yet there was a special kind of excitement at Evanston that could not have been created by organ music and pageantry: it was provided by the delegates themselves. Anyone who wanted to sense the distant scenes of Christianity's mission, the hymn of its work and the constant drama of its struggle for souls had only to meet the delegates...
Paris-Soir into their chief propaganda organ. Prouvost, who moved to Southern France, was accused of collaborating with the Germans and retaining control of his paper. But after the liberation an investigating court cleared him of the charges and Prouvost started his comeback...
...Soviet Union took more rigid positions than ever before, making it perfectly clear, where there might have been a doubt, that it will not permit a control organ to . . . take effective action in the case of violation of a disarmament agreement . . . It also became perfectly clear . . . that the Soviet Union would not permit a control organ to . . . deal vigorously with clandestine violations of a disarmament program. To use the precise example which appeared during the meetings, the control organ could not investigate a tractor factory suspected of producing munitions . . . The Soviet Union was less interested in negotiating on disarmament than...
...dominated and contradicted testimony by such ex-Communists as John Lautner and Fordham Professor Louis Budenz (who had testified that Melish was a party member). After testifying that he had written two stories for the Daily Worker, Melish was asked whether he knew that the Worker is the "official organ" of the Communist Party. His answer: "That's hearsay." Pressed to identify Communists who came to him for advice, Melish stood on his cloth: he claimed "ministerial privilege" to keep their confidences...