Word: blaming
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Administration has achieved prosperity . . ." His voice trailed off. After a pause, he blurted: "You know, I find so many interesting things in these speeches, I have to stop and think about them once in a while." At other times he interjected, "It says here," or simply shrugged off the blame: "I didn't write...
...most Germans needed no further evidence of the wartime hatred of themselves among the Allies, and some even conceded, as did Bonn's General-Anzeiger, that "those who are outraged at the attitude of Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt should not overlook the fact that Germany was partly to blame for the unhappy development." Among responsible West Germans, the most widespread reaction was the realization that all of the Allies were responsible for 1) the partition of Germany, and 2) the opening of Europe to Communist invasion. Said the Rhein-Zeitung of Koblenz: "Yalta was Stalin's great victory...
Alternative: War. To many of Kenya's 40,000 white settlers such a policy amounts to appeasement of "coolies" (Indians) and "monkeys" (Africans). They blame their trouble on the faraway British Colonial Office, which they regard as a "nigger-loving" annex of the London School of Economics. Some of Minister Blundell's neighbors openly call him a traitor, because he lent his considerable prestige to a series of reforms that admitted one African and two Indians to the governor's cabinet. But when the question was put to the white settlers at Nakuru last week, Blundell...
...would be unfair to lay all the blame for the over-specialization of pre-medical students on the medical schools, for the students themselves are usually partly at faulty. There is no reason, however, for the schools to add to the confusion. Instead of implying that there is no limit to the number of science courses that pre-medical students should take, the schools should set up a fixed minimum standard of admissions requirements and maintain...
This provided a perfect opportunity to introduce Koussevitzky to the Harvard and Radcliffe singers. At first the conductor did not want to accept Davison's offer; he though something must have gone drastically wrong in rehearsals and that Davison wanted to escape blame at the actual concerts. He finally agreed to conduct, however, and after the concerts wrote; "Harvard has the best trained chorus I have ever heard in any country of the world...