Word: scandalizer
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...Scandal at Abu Ghraib As details of the horrible torture of Iraqi prisoners of war by U.S. soldiers and interrogators continue to emerge [May 17], they fit into a pattern of abuse shown in reports from Afghanistan and Guantánamo. Such a consistent approach can only be explained by direction from the top, not by anarchy from below. As a psychologist, I can state that some of the methods are well-known psychological procedures of behavior control. The attempt by the Bush Administration to blame individual soldiers for these abuses is ridiculous. Guido F. Gebauer Niedersachsen, Germany...
Archibald Cox ’34, Loeb University professor emeritus at Harvard Law School (HLS) and the special prosecutor whose vigorous 1973 investigation of the Watergate scandal led to the eventual resignation of President Richard M. Nixon, died on May 29 at his home in Brooksville, Maine...
News of the scandal spread quickly, making headlines in papers ranging from The New York Times to London’s Daily Telegraph...
Alter’s story on the scandal, “MIT: ‘Fear of Flying’ Now Playing,” first ran in 1979 in The Crimson—and later all over the world’s tabloids—with the lede: “Names, sex, newspapers. They don?...
Gibbs chose the right word to describe the effect of the prison-abuse scandal: humiliation. Some photo images find the retina of the heart and never go away: the fallen G.I.s on Omaha Beach on D-day, the napalmed girl in Vietnam and the collapse of the World Trade Center towers. And now the photos of depraved acts perpetrated against Iraqis by Americans at Abu Ghraib have soiled and overwhelmed the sensibilities of good people everywhere. RICH HOUSEKNECHT Greensboro...