Word: rousselot
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Congressman John Rousselot (R- Calif.) infiltrated Harvard Saturday in an attempt "to bring the good, positive conservative message" into the heart of liberal-land. The young California representative struggled with hostile audiences at M.I.T. and the law school Young Republican luncheon before dashing to a highly appreciative YAF conclave at Leverett House...
...emphasize that "we don't intend to co-exist with the Communist conspiracy," Rousselot recommended breaking off relations with the U.S.S.R. After observing that our embassies behind the Curtain have been of little use, he pointed out that the Soviet embassay Washington "only provides a base for spying activities...
...rightists intend to figure in as many congressional campaigns as possible next year. California's Representative John Rousselot, a member of the John Birch Society, is talking of running for the Senate in the 1962 G.O.P. primary against Incumbent Thomas Kuchel. Arkansas Congressman Dale Alford has already begun to use far-right material in a buildup against Senator J. William Fulbright. Says Indiana's Clarence Manion onetime dean of Notre Dame Law School and a veteran anti-Communist lecturer and writer, who claims to have 350 Conservative Clubs in operation: "I've never seen anything like this...
...home town have been attracted to the society, and I am impressed by the type of people in it. They are the kind we need in politics." Republican Congressman Edgar Hiestand of California called the attacks "a pro-Communist smear," proudly noted that both he and John Rousselot, another California Republican, are Birchers. Ohio Republican Gordon Scherer, a member of the House Un-American Activities Committee, said that although he was not a member, he "looked favorably on this organization...
...intriguing as a wordplay on John the Baptist, the herald of Christ's coming. The Fall is too obviously the novel of a man in mid-quest to be Camus' last word. Perhaps both book and author are best described by the late French Jesuit Pierre Rousselot, who once wrote: "The human soul has not found itself; it is looking for itself; and this kind of absence of itself from itself is the essential sign signifying the state of being on the way, tending towards...