Word: defenders
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...what UMass coach Chuck Studley called the most important play of the game. The visitors won the coin toss and chose to defend the open end of the field with the strong wind at their backs. After three unsuccessful Crimsos attempts from scrimmage, the Redmen took charge on their 41 and in 11 plays surprised the varsity with a touchdown...
...have become so accustomed to reliance upon nuclear deterrence, disguised as "security," that its rejection creates a vacuum that appears equally frightening at first glance. Conflicts among nations exist and will continue to exist, and we must consider how to keep alive our basic values and defend our tradition of liberty in the absence of the self-defeating policy of deterrence. Today the choice before thinking Americans who are concerned about the future of the nation and of mankind is not total surrender versus total annihilation. This idea is either a deliberate invention to support the massive retaliation doctrine...
...executive dining room and baits the mighty. At a recent lunch, he noted in a loud, salad-wilting voice that Eddie Fisher would be producing Elizabeth Taylor's next picture for Columbia. Studio Boss Sam Briskin. according to Susskind. spoke up from 20 feet away to defend the arrangement and asked what Susskind thought of it. "It's maniacal." said Susskind smoothly. "The next picture Elizabeth Taylor makes for you after this she will insist that her mother-in-law play the part of the other woman. After a while you won't be running a major...
Slamming their way into the crowd, Congolese police and gendarmes had begun to arrest anti-Lumumba demonstrators, first clubbing them to the ground with batons, then punching at them with rifle butts. When some of the retreating demonstrators tried to defend themselves with rocks, a ragged line of police chased after them, firing from the hip: all that prevented a massacre comparable to South Africa's Sharpeville (TIME, April 4) was the cops' bad aim. Circling unhappily in the background, Lumumba's Red-lining press adviser, Frenchman Serge Michel, passed a one-word judgment on the whole...
...shrouds, hide them on dealers' roofs and behind high fences, usually move them about after dark. But enterprising newsmen have hired helicopters to spot the new models, often wait on street corners in hopes of snapping one as it passes by on its way to a dealer. Automakers defend their summer secrecy on the ground that early pictures of new cars encourage customers to wait for the new models in stead of buying current models. They also hope to achieve maximum publicity impact by releasing stories and pictures in all newspapers and magazines on a set day. Last week...