Word: crimed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...SQUAD (ABC, 7:30-9 p.m.). Three young hipsters, Michael Cole, Clarence Williams III and Peggy Lipton, join the fuzz as underground agents in a mod war on crime. Premiere...
...rights and property of others. Police protection for those who still believe in law and order and who will not be frightened or bullied by impassioned militants who pursue the right to protest but cavil at constructive cooperation. This same police protection, in the past, kept the crime rate down and made juvenile delinquency almost nonexistent...
Fearless Fosdick. Humphrey knows that a major element in this reversal is a conservative reaction to racial tension, crime, high taxes and the anti-poverty program. "I won't pander to it," he declares. "We're not going to out-Nixon Nixon, and we're not going to out-Wallace Wallace. We're going to say it like it is." To blunt Nixon's attacks on the crime issue, Humphrey argues that police and the courts must receive more material assistance in doing their jobs. He also argues that the problem is basically social, not a matter of higher conviction...
...treaty's chances for passage. He approves of the Supreme Court's 1954 school-desegregation decision but opposes stringent federal dictation to local school authorities to make integration work. He acknowledges repeatedly that civil order cannot be achieved without social justice but last week called Humphrey "naive" about crime. "Doubling the conviction rate in this country," said Nixon, "would do far more to cure crime in America than quadrupling the funds for Mr. Humphrey's war on poverty." He is in favor of "order with progress" when he speaks in Westchester but for "law and order" when...
...singled out this private, among thousands of deserters, to serve as an example. Then they thought better of it and hushed up the whole affair. Equally compelling was The Hiroshima Pilot, in which Huie demolished the myth that B-29 Commander Claude Eatherly remorsefully turned to a life of crime after dropping the atom bomb on Hiroshima. Eatherly, Huie showed, had not even flown in the mission over Hiroshima, and his guilt feelings developed years later under the encouragement of ban-the-bomb propagandists...