Word: architect
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Dulles' name had been proposed for the job by Michigan's ailing Arthur Vandenberg, the Republicans' chief architect of bipartisanship in foreign policy, and his selection was hailed by Vandenberg's hardy little group of Republicans in the Senate. But there were other Republicans who were not so happy at the idea. Bipartisanship, snapped Ohio's Robert Taft, "is not accomplished by the appointment of an individual Republican . . . Bipartisanship is being used by Mr. Truman as a slogan to condemn any Republican who disagrees with Mr. Truman's unilateral foreign policy, secretly initiated...
...policy in Asia in recent years had led to disasters many times worse than Pearl Harbor. Yet it was not fair either to Lattimore or the U.S. Government to charge, as McCarthy did and does, that Lattimore was the "chief architect" of that policy. Dump heaps have no architects. But Lattimore's' ideas did work to thwart the development of an effective program of U.S. help to anti-Communist forces in Asia...
McCarthy admitted: "In the case of Lattimore, I may have perhaps placed too much stress on the question of whether or not he has been an espionage agent." What was really important, said he, was Latti-more's position as chief "architect of our Far Eastern policy . . . forgetting for the time being any question of membership in the Communist Party or participation in espionage...
Arthur H. Vandenberg, Republican from Michigan, 66, the Senate's architect of bipartisan foreign policy. More than most, he has the historic view, and his opinions carry immense prestige. He has done more than any other Senator, of either party, to reshape foreign programs so that the Senate could approve them. Middle of the road in domestic affairs, in foreign policy he has rendered his country historic service with his sound counsel and his baroque eloquence...
...champagne," attributes much of Budweiser's success to its lengthy and more costly brewing process, in which it is fermented twice. Although the company has spent $64 million since Repeal to expand plants and boost production, Gussie Busch says it is still a race between the architect and the brew-master-and the brewmaster is in the lead...