Word: anglo-american
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Harvard's team to uphold the negative on the question: "Resolved, That there be an Anglo-American alliance to preserve world peace," will consist of Frederick DeW. Bolman '35, and Gilman Sullivan '36, both of whom, however, have indicated a preference for the affirmative side...
...principle for his team to support the affirmative. A question on censorship of news was suggested, but Harvard and Oxford coincided in choosing the negative side of this topic. When Oxford refused to undertake a split team debate. Harvard was forced to accept the negative side of the Anglo-American question...
Harvard takes the negative of the proposal "Resolved: That there be an Anglo-American alliance to preserve world peace." Briefs will be exchanged before December 1 by cable, but the whole set of speeches will have to be approved by the British Broadcasting Company, a government-owned agency. If any one of the speakers departs from his submitted speech, the BBC may cut him off the air in England at least. The NBC also wants to know ahead of time what each speaker will...
...National Broadcasting Company and the British Broadcasting Company. The debate will be either a split-team debate on the subject, "Resolved: that this house considers a censorship of news desirable," or a straight debate with Harvard taking the negative of the question, "Resolved: that there be an Anglo-American alliance to preserve world peace...
...Just before the London Naval Parleys opened up, the Anglo-Saxons gave us quite definitely the impression that they were in sympathetic accord with the American conviction at the coming Parley. And that conviction: Japan shall not have naval equality. It certainly appeared that there was to be an Anglo-American bloc, a united front of two nations in concerted beliefs...