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Word: responded (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Congress will not be inactive forever, he said. "It may take a good many years," but "Congress does respond to public opinion...

Author: By Victor K. Mcelheny, | Title: Chafee Urges Control of Civil Rights Abuse | 12/13/1956 | See Source »

...assertions of dubious validity, or making assertions totally incapable of such documentation, by committing themselves to logical and verbal inconsistencies, the authors have made response on an undergraduate level quite likely. A smoothly executed series of analytic studies would have effectively curbed the students' desire to either read or respond to the articles, and would have made the magazine's becoming an accepted mechanism for exploring or asserting belief extremely unlikely. While a plea for badness is not easy to support, a plea for the expression of bad thinking, as opposed to its repression in favor of silence and vacuity...

Author: By Christopher Jencks, | Title: Criterion | 12/12/1956 | See Source »

Governments could do little, short of war, to stay Russia's brutal repression of Hungary. Diplomats could only register protests. But the people could and did respond with a revulsion that grew into a worldwide cry of anguish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WORLD CRISIS: The Mark of Cain | 11/19/1956 | See Source »

...youths and mothers not to allow gangsters to enter their homes and fire from windows." Reflected one announcer: "How brutal and inhuman it was that in past days simple party men were attacked because they were party men." But as the week went on and "progressive" Hungarians did not respond, Radio Budapest's tone became hysterical. "If you don't go down into the pits," it told coal miners, "the workers cannot go to work, no bread will be baked, there will be no electrical current." Four days after announcing that peace had been restored, Kadar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HUNGARY: Death in Budapest | 11/19/1956 | See Source »

...armed United States intervention in Hungary against Russia must be disregarded. Such action would seem to the Soviets to be clear aggression, and Soviet reaction is more significant here than is our own moral justification of action. If they felt themselves the victims of aggression, the Russians would respond in kind, and because they now seem tense and insecure, their reaction could well lead to far more than another Korea...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Third World War | 11/15/1956 | See Source »

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