Word: indictibility
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...agree with your critical treatment of "TV's Super Women." But how dare you indict, rather snobbishly, the economic and artistic drives of the networks, as well as the shabby viewing habits of the general public, when TIME so obviously cashes in on the very attitudes it attacks...
...reserves the right to retaliate in whatever way possible." Since then hundreds of Kenyans have fled Uganda in fear, carrying tales of extortion, beatings and killings of their countrymen by Ugandan soldiers. This moved Kenyan Foreign Minister Mu-nyua Waiyaki, in a letter to the U.N. last week, to indict Kampala for "systematic and indiscriminate massacre of Kenyan citizens," some 5,000 of whom remain in Uganda...
Midnight Visits. The investigation by Japanese police, tax and customs agents has already yielded enough evidence to indict Kodama for falsifying his 1972 income tax returns. But Kodama, 65, has been confined to his home for much of the time since a stroke in late 1975, and whether he will ever face trial is doubtful. His doctor says that Kodama has been talking of receiving midnight visits from the ghost of an old friend, Vice Admiral Takijiro Onishi. The admiral, by chilling coincidence, planned the first kamikaze missions in the waning days of World War II. The day before...
...nearby Suffolk County before then-Governor Nelson Rockefeller named him special prosecutor in 1972. The post was created in the malodorous wake of the Knapp Commission hearings on official corruption in the Big Apple, and Nadjari was given extraordinary powers. A Democrat-turned-Republican, Superprosecutor Nadjari went on to indict 296 persons on various charges of corruption. He won guilty verdicts against one district attorney (later reversed) and a number of lesser government officials. No fewer than 500 other investigations were under...
...rice diet of the Japanese is much lower in fat content than the meat, dairy and fried-food menu favored by Americans. But a new study by researchers from the University of California at Berkeley seems to show that the difference is largely cultural, not culinary. The findings indict stress, American-style, as a major cause of coronaries...