Word: crime
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...information dressed up with phony letter-like trappings. "I think the oath [of office] towers far above any presidential secrecy directive," McCarthy told McClellan, who rejoined: "I don't know of any oath that any man took for loyalty to his country that required him to commit a crime...
...hesitate to make known the names of informants." McClellan denied McCarthy's version of his statement, but retorted: "I do not believe you can receive information that is obtained by criminal means and hold it in your possession without the probability of you, too, being guilty of crime...
With this issue, CRIMSON editors cease regular publication for the school year and depart for Lamont to begin intensive study for next year's final examinations. A few stalwarts take time out from their labors to resume daily publication of the Crime during Commencement Week. The 1954 report on academic freedom, an annual feature, will appear in the Commencement issues and will be distributed to the undergraduate student body in next fall's registration issue...
With this paper the CRIMSON moves into its exam period publishing schedule which calls for three papers a week, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. As this year's schedule works out, the Crime will print three more regular papers: one this Friday, one next Wednesday and one next Friday. Monday, which is Memorial Day, will be skipped...
...self-incrimination varies in individual cases, but this is due to differences in the nature of the questions asked rather than to any difference in other surrounding circumstances. Thus, as Dean Griswold states, a man who refuses to state whether he has killed another is not necessarily guilty of crime, because he may have done so in self-defense or by accident. But if he bases his refusal upon a plea of possible self-incrimination, the inference is plain that he did kill the man. He would not be entitled to the privilege unless...