Word: slaving
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...Stevenson's course," Miss Weiss said, "will probably be like that of Truman; he now makes speeches against the Taft-Hartley law but he will probably use it to smash strikes. Stevenson said that the Taft-Hartley law was not a slave labor law, but the labor movement considers it as such...
...Strong belonged to a species of American now almost extinct. He was one of those solid, versatile squires who did their public duty even while suspecting public life, and clung fiercely to a creed of almost fanatical independence. He liked men who worked for themselves, and distrusted both Southern slave owner and Northern capitalist; neither, it seemed to him, could quite be a gentleman. He enjoyed comfort but disdained luxury, prided himself on literary cultivation yet squinted uneasily at intellectuals. He lived, or aspired to live, by the tone and manners of the Founding Fathers...
...every crossroad!-or to brake the suicidal careering of its production-and-profit-mad economy toward the imperialistic enslavement of all peoples, total war, and an apocalyptic holocaust and collapse . . . It is, in essence, the myth of the Frankenstein monster, the machine built to be man's slave, and which enslaved...
...threatened by a great tyranny, a tyranny that is brutal in its primitiveness. It is a tyranny that has brought thousands-millions of people-into slave camps and is attempting to make all human kind its chattel...
Died. Charles Clinton Spaulding, 78, a former slave's son who became one of the richest Negroes in the U.S.; of pneumonia in Durham, N.C. (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS...