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Word: antiwar (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Soon summer, working, lolling around, nothing to do, relaxing, no antiwar activity, no watching the papers for the latest horror story, and at the end of the summer a CRIMSON executive saw that I had planned to reprint our editorial in support of the NLF in the Freshman Pre-Registration Issue and told me not to: "I think a lot of people have changed their minds since we passed that." A quiet fall, punctuated by renewed bombing of the North. Law boards. "It-really-isn't-so-bad, maybe-I-can-find-a-way-to-have-a-decent-life...

Author: By David HOLLANDER President, | Title: A Parting Shot | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

...ARBOR, Mich., Feb. 7-A national student antiwar conference issued a call here tonight for massive obstructive protests in Washington May 1 in support of the "people's peace treaty" -and for demonstrations across the country this Wednesday to protest the invasion of Laos by South Vietnamese troops...

Author: By (special TO The crimson), | Title: Conference in Ann Arbor Calls Protests this Week | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

Ngueyen Thi Binh, chief negotiator for the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam, sent a telegram to the conference today charging that a massive invasion of Laos by U.S., South Vietnamese, and Thai ground troops was in progress and urging the group to mobilize the antiwar movement in protest...

Author: By (special TO The crimson), | Title: Conference in Ann Arbor Calls Protests this Week | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

William M. Kunsbler charged Saturday night that the Federal government is conspiring to "destroy the antiwar movement" by prosecuting the Rev. Philip Berrigan and five others in Harrisburg...

Author: By Jeffrey L. Baker, | Title: Kunstler Hits Harrisburg Charges | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

...seeks to leave the field. While convincing the home audience that the U.S. is irreversibly quitting the war, the President must keep Hanoi sufficiently off balance to avert any military disaster until American forces are well clear. Thus the rationale for the Cambodian and Laotian air actions. What disturbs antiwar critics, though, is that the U.S. has increasingly put itself in the position of preserving the Lon Nol government...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The War: New Alarm, New Debate | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

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