Word: treasons
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...grateful to the Republican Administration for the constructive steps it has taken. We are proud too of the Democratic record for bipartisanship in foreign policy-and we are especially proud that we have resisted the provocation of these Republicans who have smeared that record with the charge of treason, and every lesser epithet as well...
...Supreme Court put an end last week to a treason case that had been bungled from the beginning: the prosecution of ex-Sergeant John David Provoo, a Californian who took up Buddhism in his youth, lived in a Japanese monastery, later enlisted in the U.S. Army. Captured on Corregidor in 1942, at 25, he served the Japanese as a stool pigeon, according to his fellow prisoners, and brought about the execution of a U.S. captain. But the Army brought no charges after the war, and Provoo re-enlisted; it was 1949 before he was indicted for treason, and 1953 before...
Furious Democratic spokesmen have charged that Nixon smeared Democrats by charging that they were soft on Communism The record shows that Nixon hit hard and often on the issue, but that he never adopted Joe McCarthy's unjust line that the Democratic Party is the party of treason. Pointing out that he was not charging the party with disloyalty, Nixon made the very different charge that the Democratic Administrations of Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman had too often failed to understand and to meet the threat of Communist subversion...
Recruited. Their treason began in the middle '30s at Cambridge, where apparently wild-minded Guy Burgess, the well-schooled son of a Royal Navy officer, first met Donald Maclean, son of a former Cabinet minister and a young man with a promising future. Both moved in Communist circles. It was just before the Spanish Civil War, and both were outspoken in their dissatisfaction with the conduct of world affairs, Maclean to the point of declaring that he wanted to work for the Russians. It was at this time, says Petrov, that they were recruited into the Soviet espionage service...
...editorial control to Owner Maguire. Last week most of the Mercury's top editors left in a body. Out went Editor John A. Clements, who is also promotion boss of the Hearst, magazines, followed by Editorial Writer J. B. Matthews, Military Pundit George Fielding Eliot, Author (Seeds of Treason) Ralph de Toledano and three others. Columnists Howard Rushmore and Eugene Lyons were let go. All that the editors would say on the record was that they disagreed with Maguire's policies. But the New York World-Telegram and Stm's Pulitzer-Prizewinning Red Expert Frederick Woltman...