Word: reaction
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...integrated crowd of 1,100, gathered to hear the candidates debate, greeted the charge with boos and derision. State Representative Stokes, 40, was visibly shaken by the reaction. Attorney Taft was hopping mad. "Well, well, well," gritted Taft, 44. "It seems the race issue is with...
Unlike De Gaulle's reaction to Britain's first bid in 1963, French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville did not flatly veto British membership. But before British entry could be considered, Couve said, Britain must first of all solve all its balance of payments problems and give up sterling's role as an international currency backed by a gold reserve. The pound, said Couve, must again become "a national currency like other national currencies, not subject to the uncertainties that it has known for the past 50 years." Couve then attained a new pinnacle in diplomatic...
...notion of collective responsibility could not be accepted, said Glimp, becited the Faculty's "old-fashioned reaction against guilt-by-association" as a heritage of the McCarthy era. cause "we have to distinguish between acts on the one hand and speech on the other...
...Faculty wisely avoided severing anybody for his connection with the demonstration. Perhaps they realized the degree of angry reaction from many students that such a move would have provoked. But the punishment they meted out was still vastly out of proportion with the protestors' actions. Students sat in at Mallinckrodt in a dramatic display of their moral revulsion at the presence on campus of recruiters from a napalm manufacturer. They made their point in a way that no petition or rally on the steps of Memorial Church could have. They initiated an intensity of discussion that no milder from...
...wise for the University to provide a reasoned reaction of its own to civil disobedience. Its alternative is to forget its own rules, and to rely in the last instance on the Cambridge police. The University tends, as it should, to be far more tolerant of shrill dissent than society at large. Those who wish to defy laws and risk arrest to make their protest heard will not be deprived of the opportunity, either off campus or on. The University will still remain a haven for the freer expression of ideas...