Word: react
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...possible, superior. Now Malcolm X, top Eastern torchbearer for the militant movement, could only sneer at Martin Luther King's gospel of nonviolence. Said he: "The lesson of Birmingham is that the Negroes have lost their fear of the white man's reprisals and will react with violence, if provoked. This could happen anywhere in the country today." Last week, at the crest of the crisis, a white Birmingham waitress said to a customer from the North: "Honey, I sure hope the colored don't win. They've winned so much around the South...
...hope that if the Communists ever seize my home I will be able to react with as much courage and effectiveness as that displayed by the Cuban exile groups in attacking Soviet ships...
...several days, Washington had been wondering how President Kennedy would react to the report (TIME, March 29) of a ten-man presidential committee, headed by retired General Lucius Clay, recommending cuts that could save some $500 million in the Administration's foreign aid program for next year, originally set at $4.9 billion. As it turned out, the President was willing to go part way with Clay. Dropping in at a meeting of the Magazine Publishers Association, he confided that his foreign aid message this week would request $4.7 billion, and that he would be content if he ended...
...know how Dawson wants his readers to react to this stanza of "Bernie's Christmas," but I responded with an unequivocal...
William E. Borah was the last Idaho Senator with the concern, ability, and security to act for the national interests as he saw it, regardless of how his constituents would react. The result of the 1962 election indicate that Church can probably stay in the Senate as long as he wants. How far he will follow the Borah example is still an open question...