Word: threats
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Czechoslovakia's most successful tools of resistance. The National Journalist Union's weekly Reporter, for example, was reprimanded and suspended from publication early last month for its thinly veiled anti-Russian editorials. Its editors promptly demanded a formal court hearing of their case, and that mere threat of publicity proved enough. Reporter was put back on the newsstands. The parliamentary cultural committee added its salute to defiant journalism by adopting a resolution specifically commending the Czechoslovak radio for its dramatic invasion broadcasts. And as always, the spirit of resistance found voice in wry Czechoslovak humor, notably...
DeMichele opened the scoring in the first period on assists from both Cavanagh and Owen, and then Bill Lamarche '64 scored to tie it up for St. Nick's. This was the end of the threat as Tom Micheletti scored a goal two minutes later which started a streak of six Harvard scores...
...working relationship between the university and the military. And should circumstances arise in the future when such a relationship would again serve the cause of peace, then it can be re-established. But right now, when the over-expansion of the American military machine has become perhaps the greatest threat of all, the time has come to make it clear that Harvard is no longer interested in being used in a one-sided deal with the military establishment. If we are to strike at the ideology of Cold War unity on which ROTC is based, then this should be done...
...commanders see the main Communist threat now aimed at III Corps, the region comprising the ten important provinces around Saigon. Earlier this month, the highly mobile First Air Cavalry Division with its complement of more than 400 helicopters was shifted from northernmost I Corps into the Cambodian border fringe north and northwest of the capital, to strengthen allied defensive screens there. The U.S. command estimates that the jungles along the sievelike frontier harbor as many as four Communist divisions, some sheltered in newly built base areas. Throughout III Corps, the Communist order of battle has risen from 60 main...
...South Vietnamese commander of I Corps, Lieut. General Hoang Xuan Lam, charged that the North Vietnamese were moving through the DMZ in company-sized units. Despite 21 significant confirmed violations of the buffer zone, U.S. officers saw no pattern of abuse there and could locate no major military threat. At the same time, Saigon claimed that, despite the understanding that cities should not be hit, the Communists had shelled 98 civilian areas in the first two weeks since the halt-five times as heavy a bombardment as in the fortnight preceding it. Such statistics would clearly be useful to Thieu...