Word: defendent
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...CRIMSON has retained A. DeGuglielmo '29, Mayor of bridge, to defend the arrested ... Three CRIMSON were arrested and one had his fiscated by the police...
First, Salan and his lieutenants believe that what is being tested in Algeria is not the right of peoples to self-determination, but the will of the West--or at least France--to defend itself against its mortal enemies. The O.A.S. unabashedly calls the Algerian fellaghas the enemies of the West, just as the Communists are. There is a strong racist strain in their position, of which they are not ashamed. They believe that the Communists, though espousing the nationalist cause of all the great unwashed of the colonial world, regard their "dirty little brothers" with scorn...
...part of which pleased Indonesians while infuriating Texans. During a question and answer period, a student wanted to know how the U.S. could defend its moral position in the Mexican War of 1846-48. Said Kennedy: "Although there might be some from Texas that might disagree, I would say we were unjustified. I don't think that this is a very bright page in American history." Predictably, Texas politicians from the Rio Grande to the Panhandle came up shooting. Cried Texas' Republican Senator John Tower: Kennedy's "glaring ignorance" of Texas' history was a "shocking surprise...
Crisscrossing the city, Menon sound trucks blared out the theme that Menon was a modern Marco Polo, spanning oceans and continents to defend India's interests all over the globe. But Menon himself scarcely concealed his contempt for constituents. At one gathering in a slum area, he stretched out on the platform behind the party functionary who was eulogizing his accomplishments and fell fast asleep. Awakened by applause, he scrambled to his feet and spoke a few words in English, which sailed right over his Hindi-speaking audience...
...melody, Papa Liszt no doubt would be writhing, not twisting. And he would have plenty of company-solid German doctors who warn against "accelerating one's hips and legs in opposite directions," parents and churchmen who deplore "the overt sexual implications of the dance." But some German intellectuals defend the twist. It is, says one Munich psychiatrist, "a proper cure for working off frustrations." And a psychiatrist in Berlin, where the cold war takes the rap for all sorts of aberrations, sees it as a byproduct of an anxious age. ''The twist craze," says...