Word: narrowed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Their demands were varied: the release of Bhutto, improvements in education, better living conditions, press freedom, an end to emergency laws and to Ayub's presidential system, which is based on a narrow electoral college of 120,000 privileged people. Demonstrations, some peaceful, some unruly, hit at least three dozen towns and cities in both West and East Pakistan...
Bowdoin scored at 11:15 to narrow Harvard's margin, but Tom Paul and Bill Holmes combined on a two-on-one rush for the third Crimson score as Paul slipped the puck under the goalie's legs. Bowdoin defenseman Ed Dowd continued the see-saw game with a goal at 18:44 that ended the first period Harvard 3, Bowdoin...
...last year's opener against Holy Cross, a traditionally weak team, the Crimson romped to a 24-3 win only to be surprised two days later by SMTI, which the fencers defeated by the narrow margin of 17-10. This year the two teams are reversed on the schedule, and once again both are very weak...
...Friday morning, the busiest place in Jerusalem is the Mahaneh Yehuda (Camp of Judah) market. Last week, a crowd of 3,000 filled its narrow lanes and open stalls as housewives shopped for the Sabbath. No one noticed a small blue delivery van parked on Agrippas Street, nor could they know that it carried 450 lbs. of explosives and a timing device. At precisely 9:28 a.m., the van blew...
When it comes to the interrogation of criminal suspects, Friendly argues for a more narrow interpretation of the Fifth than the court gave in Miranda v. Arizona (TIME, June 24, 1966). At the very least, Friendly believes, a policeman investigating a crime should be able to question a suspect on the street before taking him into custody. Yet he fears that the court may eventually bar even this. Nor is it asking too much, says Friendly, to require a man brought to the station house to identify himself. Agreeing with the goal of Miranda-to make certain that the rights...