Word: expels
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...formal pretense that Chiang Kai-shek's regime on Taiwan is the legitimate government of China, Washington is reluctant to let a longstanding ally down-or to be seen to do so-and is also concerned that the U.N. might set an unfortunate precedent should it expel a well-behaved charter member. More important, the U.S. wishes to prevent any bandwagon rush to Peking, thereby giving many smaller nations time to adjust to the new triangular world in which the U.S. will be conducting big-power diplomacy with both Moscow and Peking. As it turned out, the U.S. lost...
...trip, attempted to justify his visit by declaring, "If we do not agree and we do not meet, how are we going to resolve our problem?" But the visit still evoked considerable antagonism in much of Black Africa. Tanzania's government paper, The Standard, urged the O.A.U. to expel Malawi, adding that the trip would "further alienate Banda from all those who believe in the equality of man." In Kenya, the Daily Nation declared that Banda's visit, if followed by those of other African leaders, would "set into motion a train of diplomatic events that may well...
...College Administrative Board required the undergraduate to withdraw, but recommended to the Faculty that he be dismissed by a Faculty vote. Since the student has a previous record of University discipline for plagiarism, the Ad Board's normal procedure would be to expel him with no option to reapply. With a Faculty vote to dismiss, however, he would be allowed to reapply in several years on the recommendation of the Ad Board...
...Harvard Administration condemns the term-paper business in vehement language. Dean Epps said that the business "strikes at the heart of the educational process." As plagiarism, it is "an offense which the University will not tolerate under any circumstances," Epps said, warning that Harvard might expel a student caught buying a term paper...
...most attention was the arrest of twenty allegedly North Korean trained Mexican revolutionaries for plotting the government's overthrow. The uncovering of this group, which calls itself the Movimiento de Accion Revolucienaria and was supposedly aided by the Soviet Union, has given President Luis Echeverria's administration excuse to expel five too-ranking Russian diplomats and begin what some say is a new wave of political repression. In a Nixonian gesture, Echeverria appealed for national unity in the face of crisis while his Partido Revolucionaria Institutional (PRI) bought pages of advertisements in the country's major newspapers to print some...