Word: compassioner
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The Nixon Administration that "came out saying we shouldn't be soft on criminals," now asserts "we should have compassion for criminals," Lowenstein said, citing an announcement made by Nixon adviser Henry A. Kissinger '50 last month. Kissinger sought "compassion" for the persons connected with the Watergate break-in.
Decay. All in character, of course. Archer is as much loser as winner. In his wash-and-wear slacks and sports jacket he shoulders resentfully among the heedless rich and the heedless young who are the villains of Macdonald's recurrent daydream, and ours. Roughly at first, then with...
Instead of asking 13 days ago for the resignation of his aides involved with the break-in at Democratic National Headquarters or those implicated in the alleged coverup attempt, Nixon asked Henry A. Kissinger '50, his foreign policy adviser, to give a major speech on European relations. Kissinger's speech...
Tyrant. Kott's approach to tragedy is almost too empathetic. He begins and ends with the supreme sufferer, Prometheus. The classic hero, he suggests, enters a world that is either mismanaged or overmanaged. The tyrant may be a king or he may, as happened in the case of Prometheus...
III. Of all these Harvard appointments, probably the best known is Henry Kissinger, who called for compassion last week. Kissinger is a German by ancestry and conviction. So are John Erlichman and H.R. Haldeman, who have been linked to Watergate.