Word: whips
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...veins. They rioted. A try at wrecking the conservative newspaper Le Figaro brought out their old opponents, the cops. One camera caught cop and Commie in a balletlike tableau (see cut) which suggested a title-The Afternoon of a Gendarme. French ports were tense as Communists still tried to whip up the dockers to strike ships bearing U.S. aid to France. On the whole, however, Frenchmen last week were as lighthearted as men may be who live with no more in the backs of their minds than an unstable government at home, a half-barbarian horde of Russians near...
...Free Handicap No. 1, first of the Eastern trials building up to the Derby climax May 6. The race was only six furlongs, and Owner Chenery fretted about Hill Prince's slow starts and his 124-lb. impost. His concern seemed justified when, despite Arcaro's quick whip, Hill Prince was a poor next-to-last at the half-mile post; it seemed improbable that the bay could make up eight lengths and pass five horses in the next quarter-mile...
...government benches, Socialist Deputy Prime Minister Herbert Morrison looked up in alarm, whispered to Clement Attlee, then turned to Chief Labor Whip William Whiteley. Whiteley scurried out, found a few Laborites dawdling in the bar, a few in the smoking room, and some more in the library. Labor, with an overall parliamentary majority of only three votes, had been caught napping...
...whereby a President can pay his expenses from his $40,000-a-year travel allowance instead of from the party treasury. He will deliver the Democratic line as the presidential train winds through Maryland, where Millard Tydings is gunning for re-election to the Senate; Pennsylvania, where Democratic Senate Whip Francis Myers faces a stiff fight against Republican Governor James Duff; Ohio, where the President would love to kayo Senator Bob Taft; Indiana, where Republican Homer Capehart is up for reelection; and Illinois, where Senate Majority Leader Scott Lucas has to step fast to be sure of another term...
...some formula that will meet the British need for saving dollars and still permit the U.S. to compete on equal terms in the world oil market. But Texas' Senator Tom Connally last week decided the time had come to get tough. With his Foreign Relations Committee holding a whip hand over ECA's new $2.9 billion appropriation, Connally announced that he would seek to block all further aid to Britain unless it abandons its "discrimination" against...