Word: lippmann
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Twice last week he turned his full anger on journalistic critics. At one press conference he accused Columnist Walter Lippmann (without using Lippmann's name) of vicious, venomous vituperation. Next day, he gave the New York PM's Correspondent I. F. Stone a bitter, face-to-face calling down...
...this exchange of personalities satisfied the Secretary's anger, it did not satisfy everyone. Editorialized the New York Herald Tribune (which syndicates Lippmann's column...
...great embarrassment is shortage of escort ships-due, according to Columnist Walter Lippmann, to "lack of foresight in the Navy Department." Other causes have contributed to the shortage, notably the urgent construction of other types for military purposes. The great dispute in Washington last week was whether to cut the synthetic rubber program in order to step up production of escort vessels and other material needed in the anti-submarine campaign...
Anxiety & Peace. One man who recognized the anxiety, and seemed to discover its cause, was Pundit Walter Lippmann. A few hours before a bullet ended Admiral Darlan's baffling career, he wrote: "... We have been put to a very severe moral test in North Africa, and ... we are not meeting that test in a way which satisfies our consciences and keeps our spirits whole...
...just such dangerous preoccupation with its own troubles that turned the National Association of Manufacturers' annual meeting into a gloomy near-flop last fortnight (TIME, Dec. 14). But last week N.A.M.'s new President Frederick Coolidge Crawford echoed the constructive half of Mr. Lippmann's thesis. Up to then tall, lean Frederick Crawford had been noted mainly for his spectacular rise from hot-dog-stand owner at Harvard to mile-a-minute president of Cleveland's Thompson Products, Inc. His interest in political economy has been confined to loathing the New Deal...