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Word: dissenters (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...confined their criticism of liberals to the secular area. Andrew Greeley, the Chicago priest-sociologist who is proud to be an Irishman and a friend of Mayor Daley's, has broadened the attack to the religious front. "Let us be clear at the beginning: this is a volume of dissent," he says in Unsecular Man. "It rejects most of the conventional wisdom about the contemporary religious situation." The conventional wisdom he rejects is the "pop-sociological-religious analysis which has become part of the American intellectual preconscious...

Author: By E.j. Dionne, | Title: Keeping the Faith | 1/9/1973 | See Source »

...course included getting out of Viet Nam. The President was re-elected by a landslide. But now Nixon is ripping this consensus to pieces. The President is picking and tearing at the most sensitive nerve and the outcome is bound to be an upsurge of the type of dissent that appeared to be dying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Outrage and Releif | 1/8/1973 | See Source »

...proceedings have been repeatedly-and often mindlessly-disrupted by young radicals. They have also been marked by one pessimistic report after another on man's despoliation of his home planet. Last week in Washington, D.C., at the A.A.A.S.'S 139th meeting, scientists were again subjected to dissent and despair, but this time there was also welcome relief in the form of an eloquent defense of prudent technological growth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Humanizing the Earth | 1/8/1973 | See Source »

...reaches westward to conclude agreements on commerce and cooperation with the U.S. and Europe, the Kremlin has seemed increasingly anxious to prevent détente from penetrating Soviet borders. Since Richard Nixon's visit to Moscow last May, the screws have been clamped ever tighter on expressions of dissent in Russia. Now some Western observers think that the Soviets are poised on the brink of the most massive crackdown since Stalin's death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOVIET UNION: Crackdown on Dissent | 12/18/1972 | See Source »

...absence of such as accounting from Ebert, The Crimson must go on the available facts. The image of a Harvard dean going before a public board of inquiry to dissent from National Academy of Sciences National Research Council consumer-protection findings is somewhat unusual. It becomes questionable when we learn that the dean has been paid and sponsored by the very pharmaceutical company whose product he is defending. And if the apparent consensus of medical judgement on Mysteclin-F can be trusted, then Ebert's testimony before the FDA failed to damage the interests of medical consumers only because...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ebert and Squibb | 12/6/1972 | See Source »

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