Word: beers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...When in Doubt . . ." This innocent bit of counterfeiting was part of Daytona life last week. As Easter weekend approached, some 15,000 college boys and girls had swarmed into town to roast in the sun, dance, guzzle beer, and "make out" (or, far more accurately, to talk about making out). On the beach a couple of fast-slapping guitar players started up a hot beat. Within moments, a score of college kids were doing the twist while cheering onlookers, some of them wearing sweatshirts marked "Property of Daytona Beach Jail" and "Stamp Out Virginity," raised their beer cans on high...
...cried a young fellow. "I came down here from Penn State on $40. I got a nickel in my pocket, and I'm having a ball!" He chugalugged his beer and roared: "When in doubt, drink and shout!" That night, in a motel room. 24 boys and girls twisted to the music of a four-piece combo, adroitly avoiding two double beds, a table, a sink, a stove and a refrigerator. Cried a University of Miami coed: "Daytona Beach is the best place in the whole world!" That was precisely the reaction that Daytona Beach had hoped-and spent...
...before a rally in Lowell Hall, Beer emphasized what he had "practical or pragmatic reasons" opposing the Committee rather than on moral or constitutional...
...talk, Beer said he did not the argument, often made by HUAC's opponents, that the Committee unconstitutional. "I think Congress the right, the duty even, to investigate the Communist party," Beer said, these "a free government has the right with the use of force or conspiracy to use such force against...
Political expression should be commonly free." Beer contended. "I don't this because I'm indifferent to Communist propaganda--it is poisonous and be countered--but because I think communist opinion should be dealt with within the democratic propose. I oppose the Committee because it the public to disregard the of free discussion...