Word: aziz
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...propaganda barrages since the Reds charged the U.S. with using germ warfare in Korea. Pravda's correspondent claimed, "I saw tanks crush women and children," and reported the "physical annihilation of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Iraqi democrats and patriots.'' The Pravda man went looking for Aziz Sharif, a 1962 Lenin Peace prizewinner at the office of the Peace Partisans League (a euphemism for Red militia). A soldier on guard at the office told him. "That dog has long since been jailed.'' The Soviet Red Cross even appealed to the International Red Cross to help protect...
...Cabinet, promised free medical care and education, abolished slavery. He also planned new public morality committees to back up the religious police run by Moslem mullahs. "It is high time." he says, "to introduce some fundamental reforms. But who is more worthy than we, the sons of Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud, to handle the affairs of our country...
FREDERICK J. AZIZ JR. Dover...
...ladies have not yet learned the Anglo-Indian's snobbery, and they accept Dr. Aziz's impulsive invitation to visit some local caves. Here the effort of compression undoes the adapter. In the novel, the reader is made to understand that each woman is already under a severe strain. Old Mrs. Moore's is the approach of death and the retreat of God; Miss Quested's is an incomprehension of love. When the heat, the smells, and the frightening echoes turn Mrs. Moore abruptly into a benumbed old sibyl and induce Miss Quested to believe that...
...trial of Dr. Aziz is done caustically, and here the audience is somewhat better prepared for Miss Quested's sudden shift-this time to relative sanity. The final scene is a superb measuring of tensions between two men, but it is oddly disappointing. Fielding and Aziz, who has been cleared, come to see that the injustices of other men-of victor and victims-have doomed their friendship. They part in sadness, and the play trails off (as the novel does not) in the unsubstantiated hope that tomorrow will be better...