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Irving Louis Horowitz (September 25, 1929 – March 21, 2012) was an American sociologist, author, and college professor who wrote and lectured extensively in his field, and in his later years came to fear that it risked being seized by left-wing ideologues.
Irving Louis Horowitz [28] [18] 1991 Mostly Morganthaus: A Family History [18] Henry III Morganthau [18] 1992 On clowns: The dictator and the artist : essays [29] [30] [18] Norman Manea [29] [31] [18] 1993 A Spy in Canaan: My Life As a Jewish-American Businessman Spying for Israel in Arab Lands [18] Howard H. Schack [18] 1994 In This Dark House ...
Irving Louis Horowitz, 82, American sociologist (Rutgers University, Washington University), surgical complications. [377] Mohamed Kassas, 91, Egyptian botanist and environmentalist. [378] Murray Lender, 81, American entrepreneur (Lender's Bagels), complications from a fall. [379] Yuri Razuvaev, 66, Russian chess player and trainer. [380]
New York mobster and enforcer for labor racketeer Nathan Kaplan, and later Louis Buchalter and Jacob Shapiro during the 1920s and 1930s. [4] Martin Goldstein: 1905–1941 1920s–1930s Hitman and member of Murder, Inc. Involved in the 1939 murder of Irving Feinstein and later executed with other members of Murder, Inc. in 1941. [3] [4] Waxey ...
Examples are shooting of unarmed protestors, carpet bombing of cities, lobbying of grenades into prison cells, random execution of civilians." (see R. J. Rummel, Irving Louis Horowitz, Death by Government, Page 35, ISBN 1560009276)
Horowitz, Irving Louis. "The Life and Death of Project Camelot." Reprinted from Trans-action 3, 1965, in American Psychologist 21.5, May 1966. Horowitz, Irving Louis. The Rise and Fall of Project Camelot: Studies in the Relationship Between Social Science and Practical Politics. Cambridge, MA: M.I.T. Press, 1967. Hunt, Ryan.
(see R. J. Rummel, Irving Louis Horowitz, Death by Government, Page 35, ISBN 1560009276) Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
Irving Horowitz also distinguishes war from genocide based on who is waging it: “democratic and libertarian states wage war as an instrument of foreign policy…genocide on the other hand, is the operational handmaiden of a particular social system, the totalitarian system,". [12]