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Word: anti-nuclear (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Anti-nuclear activist Dr. Helen M. Caldicott, former clinical instructor in Pediatrics at the Harvard-affiliated Children's Hospital, said the World War II decision to launch a nuclear attack against...

Author: By John F. Baughman, | Title: Med School Steps Up Efforts To Warn About Nuclear War | 12/2/1981 | See Source »

...Nuclear proliferation is "the one crisis that overshadows everything," Howard Morland, a journalist and anti-nuclear activist, said yesterday...

Author: By Jean-christophe Castelli, | Title: Morland on the Bomb | 12/1/1981 | See Source »

...leave-it proposition is hardly worth the plane fares. Although the U.S. has the offensive in the verbal "peace war," the burden is on us to secure an accord. The longer the talks last without any visible progress, the more the U.S. initiative will fade. The European anti-nuclear movement will begin to stir again, accusing Washington of stalling and being insincere about arms reductions. Critics here will charge that the "zero-option" was no more than public relations hype, and American foreign policy will once again have been frustrated...

Author: By Paul Jefferson, | Title: Less Than Zero | 11/30/1981 | See Source »

...size and intensity of the peace protests impressed those who worked on the project. Rademaekers found the leaders of the peace movements "intelligent, knowledgeable, persuasive and, above all, convinced of the Tightness of their cause." London Correspondent Mary Cronin, who attended a huge anti-nuclear demonstration in Hyde Park, compared "the solemnity, the pervasive anger and anxiety, the grim determination to stop what they see as disaster" with U.S. protests against the Viet Nam War. For Bonn Bureau Chief Roland Flamini, the controversy on nuclear defense in West Germany was both ubiquitous and cacophonous: "It swamps the pages of newspapers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Nov. 30, 1981 | 11/30/1981 | See Source »

...times over, combined with genuine fear of a nuclear war that would leave little more than ashes and radiation where 350 million people now live. Says Mient-Jan Faber, 40, the lanky, jeans-clad leader of the Dutch Inter-Church Peace Council (I.K.V.), which serves as a model to anti-nuclear organizations elsewhere in Western Europe: "Arms control, the step-by-step approach, has not worked. Our overall goal?all nuclear weapons out of Europe?will be a long process, but it can begin here." Says Volkmar Deile, secretary of Action for Reconciliation, one of West Germany's most influential...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Disarming Threat to Stability | 11/30/1981 | See Source »

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