Word: complain
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...that Speer was a witting accomplice in the murder of European Jewry. In that speech of October 6 1943 Himmler announced that the Jewish people "must disappear from the face of the earth" and that all Jewish men, women and children were being exterminated. He went on to complain that some Germans had been protecting Jews in defense enterprises. But not so Speer. Turning to Speer, who was sitting in the audience, Himmler addressed him directly, lauding him as a man on whom one can rely to aid in the "cleansing" of the last remnants of Polish Jewry. Here...
There's an old saying that suggests you can't complain about who gets elected if you don't vote in the first place. And there's a corollary for the hockey team: Don't complain about a lost playoff berth if you weren't behind the team when it was fighting...
Many of Bailey's 1960s clients could pay him little or nothing. But, as he candidly concedes, their cases brought him other clients with substantial bank accounts. Bailey's fees are not as fat as some reports have suggested. In fact, his associates complain that the give-no-quarter Boston attorney gets embarrassed when it comes time to talk money with a client, so they usually do it for him. Bailey's firm has never charged a criminal defendant more than $200,000. One source close to the defense says the bill for the Hearst defense may not climb much...
...still chairman of the Hearst Corp. and president of the San Francisco Examiner-and spends his days consulting with Patty's attorneys. A quiet and thoughtful man, he had been troubled even before the kidnaping by some of the social injustices decried by the S.L.A. He did not complain when the S.L.A. demanded that he dig deeply into his $2 million net worth to distribute food to the poor. But Randolph, too, is said to have grown bitter since her return-bitter at the chaos and venality surrounding the food giveaway, at the Government's insistence that...
Blitz Alert. Some 50,000 to 100,000 Americans are now on lithium, and Fieve thinks "millions more" could benefit from it. Critics complain that the drug is already reaching patients who are not manic-depressives. Fieve thinks wider use is bound to come. His own four-year study reports lithium is "clearly effective" for severe recurrent depression. The drug is now being tested for everything from schizophrenia to alcoholism and aggressive behavior. The drug is nonaddictive but must be carefully monitored, and blood levels should be checked frequently; an overdose can bring on coma or death. Cautions Dr. Ralph...