Word: propagandas
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...class interested in propaganda analysis could do no better than to compare your two recent articles on Mr. Nixon and on Mr. Harriman. You have accomplished the impossible. Not only have you made a silk purse out of a sow's ear, but now you have made a sow's ear out of a silk purse...
...same day, speaking at a civic reception in Bangalore. India, Communist Party Boss Nikita Khrushchev added some more information and a helping of propaganda. The experiment, said Khrushchev, used a "minimum" amount of atomic material to create a "maximum" explosion. His interpreter said the blast was equal to "a million tons of TNT." but some Russian reporters insisted that Khrushchev said "more than one million tons." Then, after announcing that "Russia will never be first to abuse this power." Khrushchev clapped his hands above his head to lead the applause for his own statement. After the applause he went...
...cruel ritual of Soviet propaganda executions, it did not matter that Lavrenty Beria, a party official in Georgia at the time Ordzhonikidze was commissar, probably had nothing to do with his murder. The logic, so far as Russia's present rulers were concerned, was the need to keep Beria's name before the people as the man responsible for the reckless Ezhovshchina. The West could only guess what pressures inside the Soviet Union made this still necessary, 18 years later, unless it was the identity of the real murderer...
...Harvard Political Forum for producing "incipient unification" (Nov.10), and for committing its members to a single view (Nov.17), the Harvard Young Republicans have a new idea. "The proposed Forum of Political Clubs is simply a device to give Harvard's noisy minority of left-wing student politicians the propaganda benefit of a permanent majority in a purportedly bi-partisan or non-partisan organization," says club President John R. Thomson '57. These people, he claims, attempt "to make their median opinion look like a representative view of the Harvard student body...
...shows an amazing, indeed unique, interpretation of the Forum agreement. Simply stated, the Forum is an informal committee where Harvard's political clubs can cooperate in discussing common problems and sponsoring joint programs, if they wish. Since its decisions primarily concern organization--not policy--the Forum can produce no propaganda. Any policy decisions that are made in the name of the Forum require consent of all club representatives...