Word: consents
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...first Memphis march a fortnight ago, and Loeb (along with Tennessee Governor Buford Ellington) responded with state troopers and National Guardsmen, King felt that his nonviolent philosophy had been besmirched and wanted to withdraw. Only at the urging of his aides in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference did he consent to return...
...that illegitimate births in the U.S. have tripled in the past 25 years. He placed a major share of the blame on college officials who, by allowing men and women to visit each other in dorms, have encouraged intimacy both on and off campus, and "are actually giving tacit consent to premarital sex." This "puts an unhealthy degree of pressure on those who wish to curb their natural impulses," he said. But Blaine saw brighter prospects ahead. He reported on a poll of Harvard undergraduates, most of whom indicated that they hope their future children will live by a stricter...
...spoken and written about an alleged First Amendment right to picket, demonstrate or march, usually accompanied by singing, shouting or loud praying, along the public streets, or in and around government-owned buildings, or in and around other people's property, including their homes, without the owners' consent. I do not believe that the First Amendment grants a constitutional right" in this area. "Marching back and forth, though utilized to communicate ideas, is not speech and therefore is not protected by the First Amendment." Nor, by that reasoning, is there any free speech protection for those who burn...
...people wrongly committed to mental institutions who have re-won their freedom. In most cases these people have the help of concerned friends or relatives who manage to secure their release. But wrongly committed people who are alone in the world, or who have been committed with the express consent of their relatives, present the greatest problem...
...containerization expenses. City's proposed $80 million deal for the potentially profitable company would put Scharffenberger in fo'c'sle-to-fo'c'sle competition with another Litton alumnus: Walter Kidde & Co. President Fred Sullivan, who last month won ailing United States Lines' consent to a merger...