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Word: aftermath (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

This year could change the trend. I haven't even gone out for Alka-Seltzer for the Sunday morning aftermath. And from the way things have been going this year in the Ivy League, the time seems ripe for a new script...

Author: By Peter A. Landry, | Title: Petering Out | 10/27/1973 | See Source »

...editorials, The Crimson joins the seven other Ivy League newspapers in calling for the impeachment of President Nixon. The Brown Daily Herald, The Columbia Daily Spectator, The Cornell Daily Sun, The Dartmouth, The Daily Pennsylvanian, The Daily Princetonian and The Yale Daily News have issued similar positions in the aftermath of the departures of Cox, Richardson and Ruckelshaus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Impeach Nixon...Support Congress | 10/23/1973 | See Source »

...Bourguiba's plan for turning Jordan and the West Bank into one country, "Palestine," and making it a homeland for Palestinian refugees, who already constitute a majority of the region's population. Such a settlement would now seem to be unacceptable to both sides, but in the aftermath of repeated wars, one or the other may have to do some hard rethinking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DIPLOMACY: Fear for Detente Small Hope for A Settlement | 10/22/1973 | See Source »

...AFTERMATH of the war of 1948, more than 600,000 Palestinians left or were expelled from their homes. One of these refugees was Fawaz Turki, the author of The Disinherited: Journal of a Palestinian Exile. He and his family left Haifa for Beirut where he grew up in a refugee camp and slums. His book is an intense and vivid account of what it means to be homeless, to live on international hand-outs of a few cents a day, to be "an outsider, an alien, a refugee, a burden." It fills the cold term "Arab refugee" with painful reality...

Author: By Renate Lehmann, | Title: The Dispossessed in Palestine | 8/7/1973 | See Source »

...time, American withdrawal from Indochina will end once and for all the wave of liberal and radical protest that made Nixon, like Diem before him, believe repressive methods necessary. So much for the profit Democrats hope to make off of this national 'tragedy.' When the Republican Party in the aftermath of the Civil War profited to consolidate the rule of the Northern middle-class, when the Democrats profited from the Depression to enact the welfare legislation demanded by the sinking middle-class, major realignments were brought about in American society, reflected in American politics...

Author: By Seth M. Kupferberg, | Title: Liberal Newspeak and the Indochina War | 7/20/1973 | See Source »

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