By Reinhold Niebuhr The Teamsters and Labors Future Jimmy Hoffa, the redoubtable ninth vice-president of the Teamsters Union, having been cleared by a jury in the Federal Court of a charge of...
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GERMAN ELECTION FUNDS By F. R. Allemann Adenauer's party has more than all others combined By F. R. Allemann Bonn According to Article 21 of West Germany's Basic Law, political parties "must...
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TERMINAL I met a traveler from Suburbia Who said: "Today, Coming back to work from my vacation, I saw a monster at the station: A ballistic missile on display. "Perhaps the men who chose to put...
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By Boris I. Nicolaevsky (Fifth of a series) The Surprise of the 20th Congress From the time Nikita Khrushchev re-entered the Secretariat of the Soviet Communist party after Stalin's death, he...
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Architects' reputations revised Mexico City After the Quake By Victor Alba Mexico City A lady i know described the July 27 earthquake here—the most severe in modern times—in the following...
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By Lillian Smith The Winner Names the Age A CHALLENGE TO SOUTHERN DECENCY OURS is an age that has no name. Nor will it soon have one. It has often been called "the Age of Anxiety," but it will...
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THE HOME FRONT By William E. Bohn The Lake on Top Of a Volcano Last week I wrote that California's Yosemite Valley is unlike any other place on earth. I may sound fickle this week when I proclaim...
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WRITERS and WRITING Churchill's Chief of Staff The Turn of the Tide: 1939-43. By Arthur Bryant. Doubleday. 624 pp. $6.95. Reviewed by Trumbull Higgins Assistant professor of history, Hojstra...
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Ending Scientific Isolation Atoms for the World. By Laura Fermi. Reviewed by Ben Josephson Jr Chicago. 227 pp. $3.75. Physicist; graduate student at MIT The International Conference on the...
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The Revolt of the Moscow Writers By George Gibian In 1946 Leningrad was the vanguard of insubordination in Soviet literature. Andrei Zhdanov, in his pronouncements on deviations in art and...
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DEAR EDITOR DJILAS It is amusing and instructive to observe how people unwittingly read their own prejudices and preferences into other people's words. This profound thought comes to me as I read...
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