Word: strausses
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Alsop, Joseph and Stewart. Their columns in papers throughout the land have carried this sensational piece of news: "Before very long, the Eisenhower Administration is likely to have to answer a short, highly practical question: 'Do we really need scientists, or can we just make do with Lewis Strauss?' " They think that Strauss must go because he confirmed the verdict of the Gordon Gray board which withdrew Oppenheimer's security clearance-although neither the board nor Strauss reflected on Oppenheimer's loyalty. That was bad enough-now by silence Strauss seems to confirm the Shepley-Blair...
...this theory of anti-Oppenheimer motive will not account for Admiral Strauss, no Air Force "zealot." The Alsops supply Strauss with a far baser motive than zealotry. It seems-and this will surprise hundreds of his business, official and intellectual acquaintances-that Strauss is an incredibly vain, arrogant and vengeful man. Years ago, Oppenheimer had the misfortune to humiliate Strauss in an argument about isotopes, say the Alsops, and Strauss never forgot...
...closed-door session, the board of trustees of Princeton's genius-crammed Institute for Advanced Study unanimously re-elected Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer as the institute's director. Among the trustees: Rear Admiral Lewis Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, which three months ago revoked Oppenheimer's security clearance for access to Government secrets...
...Atomic Energy Commission, the byways of the National Security Council, the White House and Congress. It was a continuing report on the men, the science, the strategy and the politics involved. Some stories were short, some full-length cover stories, on men such as AEC Chairmen Lilienthal, Dean and Strauss, on Scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer, and a cover story on the H-bomb itself (TIME, April...
...were going to bite off the head of John the Baptist before it was cut off for her, but at the end, she tamed her style, let the music have its say. Her singing was as compelling as her acting, her voice easily soaring out over Strauss's heavy orchestration...