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Word: dishonorables (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...this freedom should also allow them to speak independently without "Meet the Press" cramcourses from Nixon's public relations men. The Administration is using the POWs to hide many truths--the dishonor of America's imperialism, the tentative quality of the so-called peace in Indochina, the misery of America's wounded, widowed, and orphaned, cutbacks in support programs for Vietnam veterans, unjustified legal barriers against the return of those who would not assist in U.S. genocide, and, ultimately, the trail of death and of indiscriminate destruction which we have blazed--and still carve--out of Southeast Asia today...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: If This is Peace, Who Needs War? | 3/2/1973 | See Source »

...release the POWs (living symbols for the North Vietnamese of a policy that envelops their country in destruction) while bombs fall on homes would dishonor the very existence of the victims. The alternatives are clear. Either the United States can continue its present policy, bomb the hell out of North Vietnam, lose more American pilots to death or prison, and rest assured that after seven years of saying no the communists will stubbornly retain the POWs. Or, we can accept (yes, with honor) the other side's two well-announced conditions--stop U.S. military involvement in North and South Vietnam...

Author: By David J. Scheffer, | Title: Four More Years For POWs? | 10/6/1972 | See Source »

...George McGovern. "We always set our goals high," he said, pretty much admitting that he had failed to reach that one, "but those who have faulted this Administration on its efforts to seek peace are the ones that would have the U.S. seek peace at the cost of surrender, dishonor and the destruction of the ability of the U.S. to conduct foreign policy in a responsible way." Nixon also pledged that "as long as there is one P.O.W. in North Viet Nam, or one missing in action not accounted for, there will be an American volunteer force in South Viet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Richard Nixon's Three Hats | 9/11/1972 | See Source »

...admit that he was "at a loss how to apologize to the nation for the fact that two of the three culprits have been students at our university." Education Minister Saburo Takami, in turn, apologized for shortcomings in the educational system, while Foreign Minister Takeo Fukuda spoke of the dishonor to the nation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: Limited Apology | 6/19/1972 | See Source »

...hatred at the peak until election time, whatever the cost to the nation's children and to its laws." An editorial on the expanded bombing of Viet Nam: "The war that this country's government is waging now is war trivialized . . . and involves us all in the dishonor of killing in a cause we are no longer willing to die for." An article about the Nixon Administration's record on civil liberties, by Richard Harris: "No one can say that the President has willfully set out to undermine the Constitution that he swore to uphold...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: New Politics, New New Yorker | 5/1/1972 | See Source »

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