Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/25/us/25weinglass.html?_r=0> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 16 of
16
with 100 triples per page.
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 accessdate "2015-10-02".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 date "2011-03-24".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 first "Bruce".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 first1 "Bruce".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 isCitedBy Counterculture_of_the_1960s.
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 isCitedBy Leonard_Weinglass.
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 isCitedBy Timeline_of_1960s_counterculture.
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 last "Weber".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 last1 "Weber".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 publisher "New York Times".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 publisher "The New York Times".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 quote "Leonard I. Weinglass, perhaps the nation’s pre-eminent progressive defense lawyer, who represented political renegades, government opponents and notorious criminal defendants in a half century of controversial cases, including the Chicago Seven, the Pentagon Papers and the Hearst kidnapping, died on Wednesday. He was 77 and lived in Manhattan...The defendants included Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman, the leaders of the radically counter-cultural Youth International Party , and the mutual disdain between them and Judge Julius J. Hoffman, who presided over the case, became a key element in their lawyers’ ability to paint the charges as politically motivated. At one point, Abbie Hoffman referred to the judge as his “illegitimate father” and renounced his last name. After he took the witness stand, Mr. Weinglass began the questioning by asking his name.".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 title "Leonard I. Weinglass, Lawyer, Dies at 77; Defended Renegades and the Notorious".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 url 25weinglass.html?_r=0.
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 url "http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/25/us/25weinglass.html?_r=0".
- 25weinglass.html?_r=0 website "nytimes.com".