LETTERS: Letters, Dec. 22, 1952

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Believers & Others

Sir:

Was it by accident or sheer brilliance that TIME [Dec. 1] presented the contrasting articles, "Know the Truth" and "What They Believe," in its Education and Religion departments, respectively? . . .

Is it too much to hope that more men like Carnegie Foundation President Carmichael will step forward categorically on the side of truth to expose this generation's educators and fellow travelers for the brood of nihilistic vipers that they are ? One would almost believe so, when pondering the inane and pious cant that appears as the profound soul-searching of the majority of contributors to Edward R. Murrow's This I Believe series . . .

W. J. CRAIGHEAD Lakewood, Ohio

Sir:

I could not help but compare Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt's belief to Dr. Oliver C. Carmichael's. Give us more Carmichaels and fewer, if any, Roosevelts.

JAMES BLADE Arlington, Va.

Sir:

This I Believe . . . proclaims the all but complete triumph of secularism. It looks as though we have fairly well got rid of God; it only remains for us now to get rid of Man.

ARTHUR S. TRACE JR.

Stanford, Calif.

Man of the Year?

Sir:

Would it be too much to suggest that TIME might have the broad-mindedness to rise above its bitter criticism of the past and select Senator Joseph McCarthy? . . .

CATHERINE COULTER

Waltham, Mass.

Sir:

Thomas E. Dewey, the oracle of Owosso, for his most remarkable, double-header victory in taming the Taftites and terminating the Trumanites.

SIG GREENBERG Brooklyn, N.Y.

Sir:

. . . Richard Nixon's cocker spaniel, Checkers . . . Millions of American dog owners were carried away by the image of Checkers' sad eyes pleading: "My poor master," "mortgages," "old car," "policy loan," "Republican cloth coat," etc. They rushed to vote for Nixon. The resulting landslide for the Republicans, including the election of Eisenhower, was natural, if coincidental.

RICHARD BARSKY Montreal, Que.

Sir:

Marine Commandant "Lem" Shepherd . . . (CPL.) V. H. CARPENTER (Prc.) W. F.TRASK

U.S.M.C. Camp Lejeune, N.C.

Sir:

. . . I nominate the only person who has stayed pure and innocent throughout his entire career—Li'l Abner.

JOHN BUCKLEY JR. Las Vegas, Nev.

Sir:

Christine Jorgensen . . . for Man and/or Woman of the year.

H. QUINTO

New York City

The Secret Life of Editors

Sir:

I am happy to see in your Dec. 1 issue that that great American, Walter Mitty, has become so firmly integrated in critical parlance as to merit comparative mention in three TIME departments: Cinema, Theater and Books.

HANS HANSEN

Copenhagen, Denmark

Sir:

Friend of yours?

AARON GOLDMAN

Washington, D.C. ¶Yes, but TIME'S editors were caught dreaming.—ED.

Crime & Punishment

Sir:

Shame on your Dec. 1 story about the Rosenbergs. It is an outrage . . . As a Jew, I am sorry for the Rosenbergs, primarily that they too are Jews, and secondarily that their crime does not deserve the electric chair . . .

H. W. SCHEIN Louisville, Ky.

Sir:

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