Or at least try to, the way John Feinstein did for one head-spinning season in Bloomington, Ind. |
In a floor speech, Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, called the juxtaposition diabolical. |
Reading his own apologia affirms a depth of understanding which Feinstein is inclined to ignore, dismissing him as a Stalinist. |
She was cautious, but Feinstein finds no trace of dishonour in the care she took to keep herself alive and free through successive waves of revolution and purgation. |
Feinstein worried that this language might hamstring American foreign policy decision makers as a result. |
Feinstein in April had asked the White House to be more involved in the declassification process at an earlier stage. |