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Word: westerns (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Arab headgear and Western jacket and tie, Bishara Sirhan received a TIME correspondent and observed that Sirhan had been the best-behaved of his children. "I don't know," he said, "how this happened and I don't know who pushed him to do this." Would he now go to the U.S.? He thought not. "I raised him to love. I tell you frankly: now I am against...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: A LIFE ON THE WAY TO DEATH | 6/14/1968 | See Source »

...espoused by Maoists and Minutemen alike, routinely threatened-if not actually practiced-by students, racial militants and antiwar dissenters. Such fears sound odd coming from, say, the impeccably rational Frenchmen who only recently applauded student anarchists in Paris. Even so, the U.S. is undeniably starting to lead all advanced Western countries in what Swedish Economist Gunnar Myrdal calls "the politics of assassination." No French President has been murdered since 1932; West German leaders go virtually unguarded; the last (and only) assassination of a British Prime Minister occurred...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: POLITICS & ASSASSINATION | 6/14/1968 | See Source »

From the barricaded buildings of Rome University to Britain's Porton Down Microbiological Research Center, the protests of those revolutionaries continued to agitate Western Europe last week. British students held a lie-in demonstration at the chemical center, also shoved their way past campus "bulldog" proctors to demand, and win, the right to distribute freely pamphlets at Oxford. In Rome, where they began their protest by setting fire to an effigy of Charles de Gaulle, some 2,000 students held the campus until moderate students, anxious to finish exams, and armed police stormed it. The Italian Communist Party, through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Western Europe: The Revolution Gap | 6/14/1968 | See Source »

...poster prose of revolution, alarming to a Western chief executive, is a particularly cutting indictment of a Communist leader, and students were in no mood to spare Yugoslav Party Boss Josip Broz Tito. They renamed their school "the Red University of Karl Marx" and demanded an "end to socialist princes." Across town, where students had also occupied the Institute of Technology, posters urged that "workers and students unite against bureaucracy," and-the greatest slap of all-pictured the silken top hat of plutocracy with the party's red star...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Western Europe: The Revolution Gap | 6/14/1968 | See Source »

...chance, this year's draw bunched all these teams together and matched teams from the East, South and Midwest in the other bracket. If Harvard had won Tuesday it would have had to face one of the Western teams--probably a hard-hitting Brigham Young squad that narrowly lost to U.S.C...

Author: By Richard R. Edmonds, (SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON) | Title: Did Harvard Really Belong in NCAA's? | 6/13/1968 | See Source »

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