Word: suspicions
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...conclusions Leet has reached could reverberate to Geneva. Even if the United States can no longer withdraw its inspection demands (inspection is being sought as a political precedent as well as a military necessity), a consideration of Leet's data might lead to better historical understanding of the Soviet suspicion that Inspection is an American ruse...
Apart from legislative issues, there was a vaguely defined feeling of discontent with the President that one loyal leading House Democrat described as "the malaise." Its cause: a suspicion that the President is more involved in preparing to win big himself in 1964 than he is with the immediate problems of Democrats who will run in 1962. In fact, many Democrats feel that with Brother Ted's announcement for the Senate, the so-called Kennedy dynasty is looming too large for comfort, and is bound to give the Republicans ammunition...
...late, as the correspondents reported S.A.O.'s killings to the world, the attitude toward newsmen of any nationality has veered from affection through suspicion and hostility to hatred. Rare is the man on the Algiers beat who has not been threatened by the S.A.O. Recently, two LIFE men were forced to surrender their film at gunpoint. ABC Correspondent John Casserly was told to leave town on pain of death; he now covers Algeria from Tunis. "We have no time for sentiment," an S.A.O. gunman told the New York Herald Tribune's Tom Lambert, after Lambert's arrival...
Lerner began his talk last night at Jordan Hall with mention of the Young Americans for Freedom rally in New Yok City last week and then blasted the "age of suspicion" fostered by the extreme right wing. He said that he regarded the radical demands of a YAF speaker seriously only because Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Arixz) and Sen. John Tower (R-Tex.)--"responsible office holders"--were in attendance...
...single "common cold virus," or only a few of them. With $50,000 a year for research, PHS hoped to solve the problem in five years. But the problem has proved to be nowhere as simple. Now millions have been spent, and of 100 to 120 different viruses under suspicion, about half have been convicted. Most importantly, it has become clear that one virus can cause what looks like many different diseases, and what looks like one disease can be caused by many different viruses...