Word: chamberlaine
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Samuel M. Chamberlain ’09, who helped to organize the event, said the change was an improvement. “We might do this in future classes,” he added...
...Death (Trace Adkins) points Malone to the future. From these wraiths we learn that pacifists like Malone would have been responsible for the continuation of slavery into the 21st century (because they opposed the Civil War) and for the Holocaust (you know why). A flashback to 1938 shows Neville Chamberlain signing the nonaggression pact with Hitler, then shining the Nazi leader's shoes as he and his henchman sing Kumbaya. Finally seeing the red light, Malone takes the Garden stage to proclaim, "We're in a real war, people, with the worst threat since the Nazis!" And he doesn...
...being our worst.” The Crimson’s best scoring opportunities came in the first half. Sophomore forward Leigh McCoy found classmate and forward Maggie McVeigh for Harvard’s first shot of the game, but McVeigh was denied by Friars goaltender Rachel Chamberlain. The Crimson had another near miss shortly after Judson’s first goal when freshman midfielder Carly Dickson fired a shot that barely ricocheted off the post. Providence, however, dominated the decisive second half. The Friars held a 10-0 advantage in shots and a 7-0 edge in penalty corners...
There are three compelling reasons to see Gettysburg. The first is General Robert E. Lee, the second is Colonel Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, and the last is Brigadier General Lewis Armistead. They don't embrace all the contortions imposed on the human spirit by the military necessity, but they'll do for a potent, dramatic start. And their existence as well-drawn figures amid the hubbub of a four-hour epic speaks well for writer-director Ronald Maxwell's sober intentions and very creditable achievements in this film. Of the three, Martin Sheen's Lee is the most startling...
...Chamberlain also violated Part I of President Kennedy's golden rule: "We should never negotiate out of fear, but we should never fear to negotiate." Terrified by intelligence reports that exaggerated the reach of the German Luftwaffe, Chamberlain agreed to hand over 3 million Sudeten Germans, even though doing so was more likely to embolden Hitler than placate him. But while Munich was a sellout that showed Hitler how reluctant Britain was to return to war, it was not the cause of World War II any more than the breakdown in talks with Iran could be said...