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Show 177 with the record same as he had gone into the 1944 campaign. aecu.tions made ageinst him in 1950 were based on what he had said and done before the yeor 1944, with the possible exception of his stend Health lnsuranee Bill. f8Qrs, were ;roups 0150 published we·,. lorge before 1944, and most of the dedicated tions, mcne to were not his opponents been able to use, $0 ag<dnst him in 1950. The the damage his speeches, which of cultivoting Q. Gnswer them their good-will he gave to frfendl ler Amerlcon relationships between as Thomas so. never policy with the Germans and the why hod propaganda techniques lies in the fact that conditions hod with Soviet Russia and to the United Stotes of ,The!!!!r chances for reelection in 1944, effectively, the meantime, Thomas had no't done tivating the Notional given before 1944. The observatiorl mi,ht be made thet these eetivities did war en The article in the New Masses and the book, attitude toward Soviet Russia then the fostering of better the two Most of the reodiusted of changed to the aid. bQ$ed on in oold the cul raising, with American help, of prestige, whtch had reGefted rock-bottom under Hitler, in the eyes of the world. Then, too, Thomas waged his tion Keynote speech delegates end Thomos used Smoot did to was a workef'$ say th·at he would during his campaig,n dull effort which organizational to worst career to help went into the were not too never in 1950. build a happy Hb state noon hour. conven Democratic with their candidate. QfederQI gcngl! in Utah the way him remain in the Senot., but Thomas foiled build any kind of group around h·lm ot home who eould be of reG·1 service to |