Word: defenders
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...change it or get rid of it." Censorship, to Walker, is "the paralysis or denial of everything mental or physical that a commander, his command or a soldier requires for the full employment of his weapons and entire capability-the wherewithal of victory. To investigate censorship thoroughly is to defend States' rights. The responsibility rests with the individual to be knowledgeable, conditioned, and alert to identify unAmericanism and possible infiltration of the press and other media, such as radio and television. I have little doubt that a knowing public, having read TIME, LIFE, Newsweek and Drew Pearson, will...
President Pusey has denied that pressure from the Veritas Foundation prompted him to defend the Economics Department before alumni and to ask graduates "to eschew hearsay and innuendo, take a fresh look, undate your image of Harvard, and try to see this University as it truly...
Navy's Don Griffin is returning to defend his title as the best breaststroke star in the East, but Crimson sophomore Bill Chadsey should give him trouble. Griffin will also be a threat in the individual medley. If captain Bob Kaufmann swims, Harvard should be able to beat him, but the Navy star edged out the varsity's second man John Pringle in their last meeting...
...trial begins on the highest moral and forensic planes with a charge that Germany's judges, under political duress, destroyed the heritage of law that they were sworn to defend. But in short order the script stoops to conquer the attention with a long, clinically detailed and (for all legal and dramatic purposes) pointless discussion of sexual sterilization in the Third Reich. Next comes the prurient account of an episode in which an elderly Jew, accused of committing Rassenschande (race shame) with a 16-year-old "Aryan'' girl, is legally murdered by a German judge. Finally...
...second leg of his thesis, Ardrey turns to zoology. He cites studies of certain animals, mostly nesting birds, which show that they establish a territory and fiercely defend it against intruders long before they think about getting a mate to share their domain with them. Other studies have demonstrated that animals that live in groups often have social hierarchies with dominant and subordinate members. Man, Ardrey says, has inherited both these animal customs, and so it is natural for him to kill for property or status. Ardrey believes that this information has been deliberately kept from the public, but that...