Word: rosenberger
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Korea last year, when Assistant Defense Secretary Anna Rosenberg promised that no one would have to put in a second winter, the generals winced. Both Ridgway and Van Fleet bluntly told her that it was impossible. Combat troops might be sent home, provided that there was no new Communist offensive, but most of the others would have to stay. Anna hastily amended her promise. Even then, the generals were skeptical...
LIEUT. COMMANDER EDWIN M. ROSENBERG was told six years ago that he probably had only a short while to live. Though one cancer, in the groin, had been removed, others kept cropping up. Rosenberg was treated with X rays, but the Navy retired him on medical grounds. Then Rosenberg astonished the Navy by getting well. It took an act of Congress to get his retirement set aside, and Rosenberg back on active duty, but back he went (TIME, Sept. 4, 1950). Last week Lieut. Commander Rosenberg, 32, saw his Annapolis dream come true: he was ordered to his first...
...Correspondent & Columnist Anne O'Hare McCormick, Mme. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, former Indian Ambassador to the U.S. On the list for the second time: Correspondent Marguerite Higgins. Among those who made it for the first time: Social Worker Katharine Lenroot, Physicist Lise Meitner, Princess Elizabeth, Assistant Defense Secretary Anna Rosenberg, Actress Judy (Born Yesterday) Holliday, Mrs. Ogden Reid, publisher of the New York Herald Tribune...
While Marshall was still Secretary of Defense, he sometimes brought up the subject during his transatlantic telephone calls to Eisenhower. Last July his trusted aide, Assistant Defense Secretary Anna Rosenberg, took off for Europe on a quick "inspection trip" and talked the matter over personally at SHAPE headquarters. On another occasion, Connecticut's Fair-Dealing Senator Brian McMahon, a White House favorite, carried Ike the same tempting message. Harry Truman himself may have told Ike in Washington last November that he could have house with the Democrats (TIME, Nov. 12). To all such urgings, even the most hopeful Democrats...
...President a few hours after he wrote the letter, and know personally that he had not been drinking." Not long after, Columnist Winchell slyly turned on Lyons when he was threatened with jail for refusing to name the source of news items in his column on Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, the A-bomb spies (TIME, May 14). Lyons was conducting what he considered a gallant defense of freedom-of-the-press for all newsmen. But Winchell unfeelingly wrote: "Let him go to jail. It will give me a big laugh...