Word: suggestion
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Page by Page. DeMarco had seemed to suggest just that in his testimony before the staff, but, after reading the White House statement last week, he appeared to be having second thoughts about a scapegoat role. He told the Los Angeles Times that the White House version was "ridiculous." He said he had operated on written instructions relayed through former Top Aide John Ehrlichman. Moreover, DeMarco said, specifically referring to the 1969 return, he and Nixon had gone "over the return page by page" before the President signed it on April 10, 1970. Earlier, the committee staff had asked...
...Marines in Vietnam, that organization was under civilian direction, by the elected officials of the United States government. If Marine actions in Vietnam were "genocidal," then they were determined by those officials. However much one may disagree with U.S. actions in Vietnam, where is the evidence to suggest that a planned program of annihilation of the civilian population was ever ordered or carried out? This is what "genocide" means, and to misuse the word in the manner of the editorial both cheapens its meaning, and significantly reduces the possibility of rational discussion about the inherent immorality of genocide. I challenge...
...genocidal," how can they, in good conscience, continue to work for The Crimson, which by printing the ad must surely now be complicit in such "genocide?" If the students who wrote the editorial truly believe in their principles, and truly object as strenuously to the Marines as their words suggest, then why don't they resign from The Crimson? I doubt that anyone has actually resigned, and I think that their failure to do so is indicative of the complex nature of such problems that they themselves have refused to acknowledge in this editorial. Jonathan Tumin GSAS-1 Dept...
...region's technical industries (such as communications and electronics equipment, metal products, paper products, printing and publishing), in addition to its health, education and business needs. Accordingly, it makes perfectly good sense in Morrissey's view to reduce the size of the liberal arts faculty. And, as events suggest, it makes even better sense to begin by firing the younger, more troublesome members...
...here is not to abuse assistant directors at all, whose frustrations seem to me quite real. And though there's been a fair share of solemnizing lately about "scandals" on the one hand and "wise and ethical use of influence" on the other, the point is not even to suggest a due sense of proportion...