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Eisenhower avoided direct personal involvement in the two great moral issues of 1950s America, school desegregation and McCarthyism—though in the latter case his admirers claim that his deliberately above-the-battle stance was an effective opposition tactic. Standing aloof, in both cases, may have guarded and even extended his popularity—but at the expense of opportunities to provide moral leadership to a nation badly in need of it.
Dwight D. Eisenhower: The American Presidents Series: The 34th President, 1953-1961
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