Word: suspects
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Britons think they also detect a subtler change in the U.S. They believe that the U.S. may be giving up its hope of finding some positive way of rolling back Communism, and is reconciling itself to uneasy, competitive, but peaceful coexistence with the Soviet bloc. Economically this means, Britons suspect, that the U.S.'s missionary zeal for transforming the world into its own free-enterprising image might have beaten itself out on the rocks of Europe's economic nationalism, leaving a feeling that other people's subsidies, economic preferences and restrictions are facts of economic life which...
...citizen has reason to believe that an associate is guilty of violating Federal law he is under obligation to report his beliefs to the FBI. If he has no reason to suspect a delinquency it is his moral responsibility to avoid betraying his fellow into the hands of an unscrupulous and ambitious politician. To the extent that he observed these tenets, Professor Furry (and Leon Kamin) should receive the support of fair-minded...
...other hand, law enforcement in other centuries was not up against contemporary problems. Technology, which works for everyone, does not discriminate against the criminal. The telephone greatly reduces the effectiveness of such old police methods as shadowing a suspect and checking on his contacts. It is hard to trail a criminal who uses the telephone for communication unless the police can follow him technologically, i.e., tap the wires over which his messages pass...
...black pepper to Russia in return for 39 items, such as petroleum, "iron and steel manufactures," and "a wide range of industrial equipment." This agreement could easily be turned into supplying India with Russian military hardware, if the U.S. and Pakistan made a deal. In New Delhi, foreign diplomats suspect that it was Russia that first suggested this possibility to India...
...procedure could be detrimental. Planning to examine all the answers before passing them on to the faculty, the Council would remove any charges which seem blatantly false. To do this is to set up an undergraduate jury, passing on any professor who, erroneously or not, might be mentioned as suspect. Any value that the poll might have to the faculty depends on studying all the answers, including the overstated and the inane. Surely a Faculty Committee is at least as qualified as a student group to judge the worth of poll replies...