Word: socialist
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...consortium may yet be split by Mirage-maker Marcel Dassault's offer of a discount to Belgium and The Netherlands if both countries buy the French fighter. Earlier versions of the Mirage make up at least half of Belgium's fighter fleet. The Belgian Socialist Party supports the French plane because a Dassault plant in that country employs more than 80 workers. The Dutch will make no official decision until after the congress of the Dutch Socialist Party convenes this week...
...class for a year and to call in the local police to restore order to Harvard Yard. Fourth, the essay describes the sporadic and occasionally radical involvement of faculty and students in the political affairs of the nation. In this regard Lipset traces the origins of SDS to early socialist movements on campus at the turn of the twentieth century...
...past actions. The NLF has said repeatedly that it favors the ouster of Thieu and an immediate tripartite government in South Vietnam and continued North Vietnam control of be the North. That system, however seems likely to be only a temporary one what Vietnamese needs is a unified socialist strong based in cooperative rural communists where still liberties are preserved. There is nothing in the NLF's actions so far that indicates it will not work toward that goal...
...must be understood also that the Allende government was felt to be an intolerable threat to the U.S. political and corporate system in Latin America--an even greater threat to that system than Cuba. In part this was because it was the first elected socialist regime in Latin America, and so aroused the fear that if it was successful there might be a domino effect throughout the Latin American states. Also there was the direct involvement in Chile of such giant U.S. corporations as ITT and Anaconda, both of which have recently negotiated large financial settlements with the Chilean junta...
...three years before the socialist revolution hit Portugal, three women in Lisbon were planting the seeds of a feminist revolution. Meeting twice weekly, they were sharing and recording their innermost feelings--the kinds of feelings that women, and particularly women in Latin countries, have been taught to keep innermost. When these feelings became public in the form of a book called New Portuguese Letters in 1972, the authors were immediately arrested on charges of "abuse of freedom of the press" and "outrage to public decency." The trial dragged on and on until finally, in April 1974, the three Marias...