Word: rebellion
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...would ??? off uncounted millions of ??? ???. Even so, after a certain number ?? committee reports newspaper columns, and personal ??? of what-the-strike-meant-to-me, the ??? ??? begs for relief. Some of the most recent ??? ???. Steven Kelman's ??? Push Comes to Shove. suggests that the most ??? by-product of a university rebellion may be the ??? ??? at provokes...
...many ways this is unfortunate, because Points of Rebellion is not a manifesto for radical change. Rather, it is an attempt by an embattled civil libertarian to save what he considers to be America's liberal heritage. Douglas does not sound the call for revolution, but argues that unless there is extensive institutional reform in America, revolution is inevitable. Drawing an analogy between the present-day American Establishment and George III, he writes, "A vast restructuring of laws and institutions was necessary if the people were to be content. That restructuring was not forthcoming and there was revolution...
...excerpts from it appeared in "Evergreen Review." Ford termed the magazine "full of hardcore pornography," and thought it outrageous that a Supreme Court Justice should allow his name to appear in such a journal. James Reston devoted one of his thrice-weekly columns to an attack against Points of Rebellion, calling it "a misdemeanor." To underscore which side of the political spectrum Reston is leaning toward, he very pointedly referred to William F. Buckley. Jr., editor of the conservative "National Review." as "my colleague." In its turn, the "National Review" ran an article attempting to prove that the origins...
...Points of Rebellion, Douglas...
...while on the court. Ford mentioned Parvin links to Bobby Baker, thus implying the same for Douglas. He scored the Justice's affiliation with the "leftish" Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. He also expressed outrage at the most recent of Douglas' 30 books, Points of Rebellion, saying that it gave "legitimacy to the militant hippie-yippie movement." Ford observed that he was infuriated chiefly because excerpts of the book appeared in the current issue of Evergreen magazine. They were preceded by photographs of nudes that Ford called "hardcore pornography," and took pains to show...