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Word: pig (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Guided Tour. For those who wanted to see just how the U.S. "exploits and oppresses its own people," American militants ran a bus tour of Harlem. The delegates rode in rapt silence as their guide pointed out drug addicts and berated the "white fascist pig establishment." One puzzled youth wanted to know where all the late-model automobiles came from. He was told that they belonged exclusively to black exploiters of blacks-pimps, pushers and similar parasites...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: United Nations: Professional Youths | 7/27/1970 | See Source »

...believe it! You mean to tell me that Tommy the Traveler [June 22] was a pig? I remember in April when he came to Keuka. We were having an anti-Administration sit-in in the hallway outside the President's office. He popped up, said he was from S.D.S., and showed us a film right there in the hall about the Berkeley riots. We acknowledged the presence of this outsider probably because he was cute and Keuka's an all-girls school! He kept saying that we'd never get our list of demands...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jul. 13, 1970 | 7/13/1970 | See Source »

...violence," Wilson says dryly, "is not the job of police officers." Blacks, whites and Congressmen of both parties are pleased by Wilson's aplomb. As one young longhair put it: "He's very definitely a nonneurotic pig...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: What the Police Can--And Cannot--Do About Crime | 7/13/1970 | See Source »

...nightsticks. On Atlanta's Peachtree Street, where police and hippies once tangled, young officers have persuaded young civilians to help combat the use of hard drugs. When the department recently opened a store-front precinct station, officers gamely let two hippies emblazon the plate-glass window with the legend "Pig...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: What the Police Can--And Cannot--Do About Crime | 7/13/1970 | See Source »

...Waiting for Godot, with exquisite precision, records the pain of existence. "The tears of the world are a constant quantity. For each one who begins to weep, somewhere else another stops." So says Pozzo, the slavedriver, the pig, the spokesman for a decaying, overburdened, but strangely charming establishment. "There is no lack of void," says Estragon, cap-turing in his words the twentiethcentury's ironic understanding of time and space. And the agony, the anomic, the anxiety, the sheer numbing ignorance of existence is what impassions Vladimir's shriek to an unhearing universe...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: At the Loeb Waiting For Godot | 7/10/1970 | See Source »

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