Word: abandoning
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...antitrust laws, Lilienthal says, is based "largely upon prejudice created by abuses long since corrected ..." and against the danger of future abuses of power by Big Business "we either already have adequate public safeguards or know how to fashion new ones as required." In fact, the nation should abandon limitations upon Big Business for a governmental policy which will promote "those principles and practices of Bigness that can bring us, in increasing measure, vast social and individual benefits...
...High Commissioner pledged the United States to resist any Communist Berlin. "The new administration in Washington will not abandon Berlin. We shall continue to fulfill our duties and maintain our rights," he said...
...President Roosevelt came to the Casablanca conference in January 1943, and with the recklessness of a schoolboy told the Sultan he should assert his independence of the French . . . This was like throwing a Roman candle into a barrel of gasoline." Childs's recommendation: the U.S. should abandon its "Alice in Wonderland policy," which is undermining the French administration. Instead, the U.S. should promote "greater liberty for the Moroccans, within the framework of the French Union, without inciting the Moroccans to open rebellion, which has only been to the advantage of the Communists...
...more basic sense, there was no policy change at all toward Communist China: the Seventh Fleet was ordered to stop the Nationalists from making air raids on the Communist mainland, and to abandon their efforts to blockade the mainland coast. When the Chinese Communists joined the attack in Korea in November 1950, this old order obviously lost whatever excuse it ever had-but it was never changed. The U.S. fought the troops of Communist China in desperate battles, and still guaranteed the coast of Communist China against attack...
...home." After Dolly's victory, Nebraska's late Senator George Norris, friend of the underprivileged, said: "I had the impression all along that Mrs. Gann would get what she wanted. Mr. Gann, however, is left wholly unprovided for-which is exactly as I feared. I refuse to abandon him in this crisis. I do not intend to let this matter rest until I am assured that he will have at least a snack wherever he goes...