Word: tagging
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...perking up. Their senatorial candidate was Al Loveland, who quit his job as Under Secretary of Agriculture to campaign on the Brannan Plan, and then decided not to mention it at all. Instead, he incessantly reminded farmers of 10? corn and 2? hogs back in 1932, and tried to tag Republican Bourke Hickenlooper, a Cedar Rapids lawyer, as the candidate of big business and a man uninterested in the farmer's problems. Republicans were worried...
Such tongue-in-cheek stunts have earned Gugel the reputation of being a surrealist (TIME, Nov. 17, 1947). But like Salvador Dali, he now dislikes the tag; it is too tired for publicity purposes. "Surrealism," Gugel says, "started as an art of the subconscious, while I try to be as conscious as possible." Though he dotes on shoes to such an extent that they have become his trademark, Gugel insists that they have no Freudian implications for him. His grandfather, Gugel explains, was in the shoe business: "And I was always fond of grandfather...
...wanted to take on the new job. It had done so only "upon assurances from highest governmental sources that the project is of vital importance" to the U.S. The reasons for Du Pont's reluctance were plain. It did not want to risk having the "merchant of death" tag pinned on it again. Nor did it have any desire to hand more ammunition to Fair Deal trustbusters who have filed three suits attempting to break up the Du Pont organization. Last week the New York Times's Pundit Arthur Krock scored the paradoxical Government policy of trying...
Captain Patrick J. McCarthy, acting Chief of Police, revealed last night that a squad of policemen will begin next Monday to tag automobiles parked illegally in the Harvard aread between midnight...
McCarthy said earlier this year that the police would not tag at all during weekends, "because we realize the unfortunate situation that visitors are confronted with." The new move will not change this decision, he said...