Word: sloganized
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Geneva Spirit, if they bring about Western complacency and diminished preparedness, will only lead to renewed Soviet aggression. The Eisenhower Administration should recognize the false optimism that has developed in the country recently and should follow up the present Foreign Ministers conference by inaugurating--and perhaps by having its slogan-makers appropriately christen--a new Geneva spirit. This new attitude must preclude such statements as that of Secretary Dulles last Wednesday, when he, alone among the four foreign ministers, espied "considerable similarity of thinking" between the incompatible positions of East and West on the question of European security...
...Treasury Humphrey could not say. He hoped that it would, but he did not try to forecast that possibility for the President. From the budget they moved on to discuss a wide area of U.S. Government policy. The breadth of their discussion was no surprise. While there is a slogan in Washington that "Money means George, and George means money," the fact is that George means quite a bit more...
...Republican fund-raising dinners. Last week he spoke at two, in Chicago and Boston. At the $100-a-plate dinner in Boston's Commonwealth Armory, attended by 4,200-the biggest political event of its kind ever held in Boston-George Humphrey said: "Do you remember the slogan, 'You never had it so good,' and the song with the refrain, 'Don't let them take it away'? Let me ask: Who wants to go back...
...most powerful argument for Stevenson is not the shortcomings of other candidates. It is Stevenson himself. In the 1952 campaign, after a brilliant record as governor of Illinois, he brought a new quality and character to American politics. His slogan "talk sense to the American people" was carried out with few compromises. His appeal to the independent voter is great because-like Eisenhower-Stevenson is not primarily a politician...
...million paper ballots tallied, the apparent winner was sometime Physician Juscelino Kubitschek, 54, grandson of a Silesian immigrant, ex-governor of Minas Gerais State, candidate of a patchwork left and center coalition. Middle-Roader Kubitschek ran with Communist endorsement, which, in public, he neither accepted nor rejected. His slogan: "Power, Transportation and Food." Brazil can use more of all three...