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Word: shoutting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...hereby announce that I will not give out any news stories to Mr. Caploe, Miss Day. Mr. Thomas, or Mr. Magalif. It is ironic that one of the students SJP is prosecuting as a disrupter is [a member of the CRIMSON.] To deny free speech not only means to shout down what a man says but also to misrepresent what he says. The CRIMSON's treatment of our organization has been just as vicious a denial of our free speech as was the disruption by radicals in Sanders Theatre...

Author: By Laszlo PASZTOR Jr. cochairman, | Title: The Mail SJP and the 'Crimson' | 5/17/1971 | See Source »

...quiet eastern front. Visiting Cairo last week, TIME Senior Editor Ron Kriss received an explanation from Egyptian Deputy Foreign Minister Salah Gohar of what such declarations mean. "When Arabs argue," said Gohar, one of the main architects of Egypt's diplomatic strategy, "they start on opposite sidewalks and shout at one another, 'I will carve you into pieces!' and 'You'll never see another sunset!' Then, after ten or 15 minutes, they walk away and nobody gets hurt. This the Israelis don't realize." Rogers is hardly likely even to try to convince...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Mission to the Middle East | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

...correspondence have me almost convinced that my desire to hear both sides on such sensitive issues as Vietnam is unreasonable and indicative of moral callousness. But with the best of will I still find it difficult to accept the principle enunciated by Professor Warner Berthoff that "the right to shout down speakers is embraced by the same principle of freedom of speech and expression as protects the speakers in their efforts to make themselves heard." Consistently applied, the statement would mean that the right to kill is covered by the same principle as the right to live. Since...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IRONY | 5/1/1971 | See Source »

When children walk on it, the orange carpet whines, wheezes, pipes and trills. When they shout, snap their fingers or stamp their feet, the multihued kaleidoscopic pattern projected on the wall changes its shape and color. The carpet and kaleidoscope are only two of 112 remarkable toys included in an audience-participation show that is about to tour England after drawing an enthusiastic response from handicapped children in London. The unique exhibition was organized by Roger Haydon, an industrial designer, and Jim Sandhu, a medically trained lecturer on problems of the handicapped. It was designed to demonstrate how blind, autistic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Toys for the Handicapped | 4/26/1971 | See Source »

Like those on the platform those in the audience came to say something. They said it. In the circumstances of a political rally, wherever at happens to be staged, the right to shout down speakers is embraced by the same principle of freedom of speech and expression as protects the speakers in their effort to make themselves heard...

Author: By Martin Wishnatsky, | Title: The Sanders Incident and Legal History | 4/21/1971 | See Source »

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