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Word: pariah (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...many have said, given AIDS a face, an idolized, cherished and beloved face. No longer will AIDS victims be viewed with quite the same disdain or disgust, no longer will they be ignored quite as much as they have been up to now, no longer will AIDS be the pariah's disease...

Author: By Nader A. Mousavizadeh, | Title: Not the End of Magic | 11/9/1991 | See Source »

...meeting in Washington, meanwhile, Secretary of State James Baker offered strong support for Aristide's proposals. "This junta is illegal," he said. "It has no standing in our democratic community. It will be treated as a pariah, without friends, without support...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Haiti One Coup Too Many | 10/14/1991 | See Source »

...South Africa: the | shock of finding themselves moral outcasts stung many of the nation's whites so deeply that they went along with a faster and more thorough dismantling of apartheid than they might have countenanced otherwise. "It was the feeling that the country had become a global pariah rather than the economic pressures, however substantial, which seems to have given De Klerk the green light for reforms," says a British official. Laurence Besserman, a Cape Town importer-exporter, puts it in more personal terms: "Even when dealing with old and loyal friends abroad, I always had a sort...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa: A Black-and-White Future | 7/22/1991 | See Source »

...after a London policewoman monitoring an anti-Gaddafi rally was killed by a sniper hidden in the Libyan embassy. Gaddafi apologized and presented Taylor with a $500,000 check to a British police charity as restitution, but the Libyan was told he will remain a pariah until he publicly renounces the use of terrorism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What'll It Cost Me to Be Your Friend? | 6/24/1991 | See Source »

Despite this, one is irresistably led to admire Dershowitz because he has a sturdy and true moral compass. As a public figure, he sticks up for ideals of human rights and civil liberties where others would let pragmatism prevail; as an attorney, he is famous for defending pariah clients such as Claus Von Bulow and Leona Helmsley and insisting on procedural regularity and the rights of the accused. But just like a compass needle starts to go awry in the neighborhood of a magnet, Dershowitz's moral compass often veers from course when the topic at hand is Israel...

Author: By John L. Larew, | Title: Oy, Vey! Dershowitz Has a Lot of Chutzpah in Chutzpah | 6/4/1991 | See Source »

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