Word: defenders
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...yielding by one state to the arbitrary will of the other." He called for Russia, on its part, to abandon "false and misleading propaganda" and the arbitrary use of its veto. Finally he called on Moscow to join with the U.S., "veto or no veto, to defend with force if necessary the principles and purposes" of the U.N. Charter. (Foreign Minister Molotov offered no comment...
...inserting his right hand within his coat-front, "as long as it cannot be proven, beyond a reasonable doubt, to be pornographic. When a bookseller bucks Boston, he has to undergo a lot of direct and indirect persecution. Mr. Isenstadt has been undergoing this persecution but will continue to defend his constitutional right to sell books and the right of any individual to buy them." There followed a low murmur of applause from the first term law students jamming the aisle of the store...
Almost 150 men and women jammed the Lowell House Junior Common Room to hear Ellis Kaplan '46 and Samuel E. Stuart '45 defend unsuccessfully the negative position in the contest at Cambridge. Bradford Westerfield and William J. Graham, both of the Class of 1947, won the two-to-one decision for the Blue. Simultaneously, Melvin Mulligan '45 and Philip Ruppenthal '45 were defeated on the affirmative side of the issue at New Haven by an Eli team of Leo Graydill and Daniel McElroy, also...
Subject of the contest is the traditional Harvard-Yale October coverage of the issues in the coming election. Ellis Kaplan '46 and Samuel E. Stuart '45 will defend the negative side of the proposition: "Resolved, that a Republican victory this fall will serve the best interests of the country," while Melvin L. Milligan '45 and Philip Ruppenthal '45 will argue the affirmative case in a simultaneous encounter at New Haven...
...helped build their organization, trained their members, furnished them with materials and even utilized their power, for their own purposes. In 1936, Brigadier General Orde Wingate, of Burma fame, came to Palestine on Intelligence duty for the British Army. He organized raiders in Palestine. He trained Haganah men to defend British installations. In 1939, before the White Paper, stopping Jewish Immigration and land purchase, was issued, Wingate was relieved of his duty, and men who continued the training begun by him were imprisoned. In the spring of 1941, when the services of Haganah were again required, these men were released...