Word: condemns
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...know from experience that you do not get a response from Russia by conciliation." Behind him. Bevan glowered shaggily. Up hopped little, beady-eyed R. W. Casasola, head of the foundry workers, to make the Bevanites' move-a resolution to reverse the Labor executive's position and condemn any sort of German rearmament. Shouted Casasola: "Give the Germans arms, and you are on the sure road to World War III." As speaker after speaker echoed the cry, Bevan beamed and nodded his leonine head in approval. But he could not speak-as a member of the executive...
...Watkins committee this was the worst kind of abuse: "Any Senator has the right to question . . . or condemn an official action of the body of which he is a member, or of the constituent committees which are working arms of the Senate, in proper language. But he has no right to impugn the motives of individual Senators responsible for official action, nor to reflect upon their personal character for what official action they took. If the rules and procedures were otherwise, no Senator could have freedom of action to perform his assigned committee duties. If a Senator must first give...
...every] case where newspapers have [caused a man to be] sent to prison in a miscarriage of justice, [there are] ten where citizens won freedom through the ceaseless efforts of hard-working newspapermen.'' After hearing that, the New York lawyers substituted a watered-down proposal to "condemn as unprofessional press releases and public statements by lawyers . . . which may interfere with a fair trial ..." On getting word of this, the Atlanta Bar Association went further...
...York members of the house of delegates launched a frontal attack on prepayment group practice,* with a resolution designed to: 1) forbid solicitation of patients by groups of physicians and institutions and 2) condemn the restricting of a patient's choice of doctor to the members of a group or panel as a violation of "the right of free choice." Talking tough, New York City's Dr. Renato...
...article about blood banks and that ''the A.M.A. and state medical societies claim that free blood-for any patients other than charity cases-is 'socialism,' " I was bothered by the following question: Would the socialism phobia of the American Medical Association cause them to condemn the Good Samaritan as a dastardly socialist because he did not determine whether the wounded man he helped was a man of means before giving freely...