Word: cambodias
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...support President Nixon's move into Cambodia [May 18]. 1 support it because more than two years ago my brother was killed in South Viet Nam by the Viet Cong. His murderers then took refuge in Cambodia to strike again against someone else's son and brother...
...taught from childhood that one of the evil tenets of Communism is that the end justifies the means. Is it not ironic that the right-wingers are using this same doctrine to justify President Nixon's unrequested incursion into Cambodia...
...route to a Memorial Day weekend at San Clemente. Without arguing with his old friend, Nixon suggested that all the nation's serious ills are curable without divine intervention. It was the President's first appearance before a campus audience since U.S. troops marched into Cambodia, but of course this audience was more fundamentalist than collegiate. Perhaps 500 protesters in the stands flourished signs that read THOU SHALT NOT KILL. But the vast majority of the congregation drowned out the antiwar chants with their cheers. It was Nixon country, and the guest speaker was obviously enjoying himself...
...year in office, Richard Nixon's elaborately organized network of assistants, counselors, advisers and lesser factotums went largely unscathed. Any concern that it might insulate him from reality came only in sporadic muttering from Congressmen and disgruntled favor-seekers. No longer. When Nixon decided to move U.S. forces into Cambodia, evidently without realizing the outcry of protest that this would provoke, he set off angry charges that he is too isolated from many sections of American opinion. Interior Secretary Walter Hickel pleaded that Nixon pay more attention to the young, complained that he got a swift brush-off from...
...Ehrlichman's credentials on domestic matters are slightly thin, Henry Kissinger's background in foreign affairs is impeccable. Kissinger, a Harvard scholar of defense and foreign policy, has suffered three staff resignations over the Administration's Cambodia venture, but his remains a solid shop. His 42 professionals are just that, and they provide Nixon with the same quality of technical exposition that he gets from his Council of Economic Advisers under Paul McCracken...