Word: punished
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...that the victims range from "a notorious and dangerous enemy of the revolutionary movement" to artists and sports figures whose abduction may be "a useful form of propaganda." In a section headed "Ambush," he notes that the principal object is "to capture the enemy's arms and punish him with death." In "Sabotage," he observes that "a little sand, a trickle of any kind of combustible, a poor lubrication, a screw removed, a short circuit," can all go a long way. Under "Street Tactics," Marighella suggests everything from "marching down streets against traffic" to "throwing bottles, bricks, paperweights...
...precisely the people in the FLQ whom it was looking for and then sought them out with a minimum of dispatch. But the available evidence now indicates that the ban on the FLQ was designed not so much to jail its few dozen members as to be able to punish those far more numerous individuals and organizations whose political outlook approaches a position of support...
...campus administrators: "At many universities today, students encounter little formal deterrence because university administrators and faculties have often failed to punish illegal acts . . . The university should . . . announce in advance what measures it is willing to employ in response to impermissible conduct...
...punish his firm, and by extension, French capitalism, he embezzled $40,000 his first year and steadily increased his take. In eight years, he relieved the company of about...
...overriding moral issue." The liberal resolution, written by Wassily W. Leontief, Henry Lee Professor of Economics, emphasized the illegitimacy of the President's decision, and urged the Faculty to set up an independent Faculty committee-the Committee of 15-to report on the causes of the take-over and punish demonstrators. The two resolutions were combined, with the "overriding moral issue" clause dropped...