Word: kins
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...news: at the time of the election, "General Eisenhower suffers the transit of Neptune and Saturn over his Sun," and that is really bad. His conclusion: Stevenson, like a shooting star. ¶Adlai Stevenson, a pharmacist in Greenville, Texas, joined the national Stevensons-for-Eisenhower Club. Texas Adlai, no kin, though he was named for the Democratic candidate's grandfather (Vice President under Grover Cleveland), said he thinks there is "too much flip-flop stuff going on up in Washington." ¶Four big names in he world of arts and letters announced in New York that they were switching...
...could. The retired Millsboro politician, an ex-Congressman named George Williams (no kin), looked over the field and found Republican candidates scarce because everybody thought the Democrats would win in Delaware...
...Losses. Ike calculated with grim arithmetic the free world's recent territory losses to Russia. In Europe: Latvia, Estonia, Poland, East Germany, East Austria, Czechoslovakia, Albania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Rumania, with a total of 94 million people. "All these people are blood kin to us . . . The American conscience can never know peace until these people are restored again to be masters of their own fate...
...future programs, refused to discuss the matter with him. But last week other members of the panel had plenty to say. One of them was Alicia Patterson, publisher of Long Island's Newsday (circ. 138,957), daughter of the late great New York Daily Newsman, Joe Patterson, and kin of the Chicago Tribune. She refused to appear on the program unless she was allowed to condemn Grand Union's action over TV. There she said: "A dreadful mistake ... I rarely agree with the opinions of the Post, [but] I think it is most shameful to have banned [Wechsler...
...kin to the daily London Times...