Word: slandered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...should add that this practice of malicious slander and falsification by the CRIMSON has been its general policy in its coverage of our activities. Mr. Caploe in his coverage of our first Counter Teach-In presented so many half-truths that I cannot possibly cover them all here I have just described Miss Day's slanders. Mr. Evan Thomas in his article, "As Yet Unnamed Professor May Face Discipline Soon" on May 7th alleged that I was the student filing charges against a certain University professor for his disruption of our Counter Teach-In. Mr. Thomas made this false claim...
Those charging war crimes-an impressively wide range of individuals-have a solid case, with facts, legal documents, and points logically argued. Can the sages from Littauer offer anything in Huntington's defense other than rank-pulling, some unctuous murmurings about "slander" and "intimidation," and their 29 famous names?TF, Romance Languages
...charge of war crimes rationally; they simply react. However, inside the protective circle, one can see another shadowy figure, unnamed in the letter, the figure of Henry Kissinger. One can be sure that when the prodigal son returns from Washington, similar arguments will be advanced to ward off any "slander" of Kissinger, such as the charge of war crimes...
...claim by any group of self-appointed vigilantes to the right to pillory those whom they choose to designate as "war criminals." We assert our determination to protect academic freedom, and most specifically, Professor Huntington's or any other teacher's right to teach without disruption, intimidation or slander. We, the undersigned members of the Government Department, invite all our colleagues and students to condemn a campaign whose success would destroy the very foundation of a free University...
...cruel but logical culmination of a three-year effort by the KGB, the Soviet secret police, to fabricate a case against him based on Article 70 of the Russian criminal code. That article makes it a crime, punishable by seven years' imprisonment, for a writer deliberately to "disseminate slander" about the Soviet system in Russia or abroad. In order to build a case that could appear plausible in court, the KGB has planted Solzhenitsyn's forbidden manuscripts, together with spurious "authorizations," on unsuspecting Western publishers. Many Sovietologists believe that the key figure in this elaborate plot...