Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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With 1,500 guests present, the TIME of Your LIFE Ball was gala, and a huge success. To Mrs. H. J. Heinz II, chairman of the ball, the TIME Inc. theme seemed a natural for an affair that was both social and civic. Said she: "Why, everybody knows TIME and LIFE-it's like saying Hello...
...assumes an ever-expanding pie. From that assumption it derives a new meaning of Government's role in the 20th century breakthrough of U.S. capitalism. With no breast-beating the Economic Report accepts Government responsibility for correcting unemployment, raising farm prices, reducing regional "pockets of poverty" and expanding social security. It promises to curb "monopolistic tendencies," and even undertakes to prevent future depressions...
...this year's race, Patterson will have to deal with right-wing Republicans, who consider him too progressive. Says Patterson: "I plead guilty." Then he explains: "I feel that the day of the ultra-conservative is gone. We must have a consciousness of social responsibility that people are demanding of their Government. Humanitarian policies are here to stay." That philosophy has made Paul Patterson a successful governor; it will be his biggest asset in his campaign against Morse...
...whites seating from the front backward, Negroes from the back forward.) Mayor Gayle was specially vexed about the white families who give car rides to their Negro help, or pay their taxi fare. He said that the cooks and maids who boycott the buses "are fighting to destroy our social fabric just as much as the Negro radicals who are leading them. The Negroes are laughing at white people behind their backs . . . They think it's very funny and amusing that whites who are opposed to the Negro boycott will act as chauffeur to Negroes who are boycotting...
...rights of man are at stake today throughout the world . . . Absurd and dangerous as socialism and the Russian experiment may be for mankind, allies and defenders for them have been found everywhere among intellectuals. The same is not true of freedom and the American experiment. This is a very serious situation, serious in view of the destiny of man, and so grave that one wonders . . . whether the world's intellectuals have not already cast their vote against freedom . . . "If the American intellectual were clearly aware of the reservoir of hope which his country represents for the entire world, would...