Word: bitterly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...using the shorter-lived and still legal DMT (dimethyltryptamine), which produces only a 45-minute trip, or else the related DET (diethyltrypta-mine), an equally short haul. Others are turning on to the milder pre-LSD hallucinogens: cactus-derived mescaline, the American Indian's peyote (it takes many bitter peyote cactus buds to achieve a high; usually, nausea comes first to the uninitiated), or psilocybin, which produces a giggly, warm high...
Atrocity Charges. But no Israel effort could stop the refugees from bringing with them loud and bitter charges of atrocities. Jewish troops were raping Arab women, they said. Arab property was being usurped; innocent men, women and children were being killed. No reliable proof was offered for any of the charges, and no Arab went out of his way to report that when houses or cars had been temporarily taken over by the Israeli army, the owners were given receipts. In most cases, the property has already been returned...
...tung's turbulent Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution had hardly begun before it boiled down to a bitter brawl for power between Mao and the more pragmatic Politburo faction led by President Liu Shao-chi. By last fall, Mao seemed to be getting the upper hand. Liu no longer attended official functions, and his name was dropped from the list of leaders of the People's Republic. Last week Mao finally made it official...
British Prime Minister Harold Wil son has never been noted for excessive chivalry toward opponents-or subordinates. But rarely has Wilson stirred as much angry reaction among both Labor colleagues and Tory opponents as he did with his bitter attack upon the character and conduct of Colonel Leslie ("Sammy") Lohan, the civil servant in charge of governmental press relations on all questions touching national security...
...rebel inside him speak out is the Rev. James Kavanaugh, 37, a diocesan priest of Lansing, Mich., now serving as a counselor to a private mental health foundation in California. In a new book entitled A Modern Priest Looks at His Outdated Church (Trident; $4.95), Kavanaugh unleashes a bitter, searing attack on the foibles and faults of Roman Catholicism, which he still professes to love and serve. Thanks in large measure to its shock value, as well as an aggressive publicity campaign on its behalf, his book is well on its way to becoming a profitable publishing success...