Word: zorza
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...that point, Richard Zorza '71, formerly of the Harvard Moratorium Committee, attempted to mount the stage from the center aisle. He was tackled and sent sprawling by two of the blue-arm-banded security marshals...
...Richard Zorza '71 of Peace Action, which has about 150 people working on six to eight peace campaigns, said last night, "In general we feel that marches and rallies are useful as a mobilizing technique, but not this close to elections...
...Especially after the experience of last April 15, we felt that there was a danger of violence in the form of police over-reaction. We're relieved that none occurred," Zorza added...
...Peter the Great, who coveted the warm water ports of the Mediterranean. Though the Kremlin has soft-pedaled the Communist imperative to spread the red flag wherever possible, such ideological expansion continues to affect Soviet conduct. The most important element in the Soviet thrust, as British Kremlinologist Victor Zorza notes, is that "the Soviets are a great power, and they want the facilities that go with great-power status." Those facilities include not only markets for Soviet industry and sources of raw materials, but also the fleets, bases, and other concrete symbols needed to establish influence beyond a nation...
They should certainly avoid Richard Zorza's The Right To Say We: The Adventures of a Young Englishman at Harvard and in the Youth Movement (New York: Praeger, paper $2.25). Whatever things Zorza's book may have going for it, facts are not among them. Culminating all the sloppy inaccuracies, the book is dedicated (inexplicably) to the city manager of Cambridge, whose first name Zorza gets wrong. Although the most smoothly written of the three strike books, Zorza's book alternates from wallowing in romanticism about Youth and Togetherness to trampling through the most incredibly arcane details of moderate student...