Word: glennon
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...Union does not stand on who the President is," says pastor John Glennon, an ally of Currier's. "The State of the Union is a matter of heart. It's not a matter of persons." But Clinton, like every President before him, will do everything in his power to suggest otherwise. There was never much chance that Clinton would delay his speech until the trial was over. Never in memory has a President had so much to brag about and so many reasons to do it loudly. Clinton, forever the luckiest of men, is the luckiest of Presidents...
...addition, I realized that I didn't know much about the U.N. beyond what I read in the papers. I didn't know how much money the Administration owed the U.N. for unpaid dues. Professor Michael Glennon, an international law professor from UC-Davis who was one of our group moderators, mentioned this and other important facts while pointing out that the U.S., under international law, has a contractual obligation to pay its arrears. He noted that the U.S. will eventually lose its moral powers of persuasion if it fails to adhere to international laws...
...Glennon also informed us that the U.N. charter provides for a supranational police force which would undertake peacekeeping missions. I had always assumed the isolationist fears of an international army that did not operate under U.S. supervision were paranoid fantasies, but I didn't know that such an army was, in fact, the brainchild and fondest hope of those who founded...
Second Period: 1, N.U., Sebastian LePlante (18) (Peter Schure) 6:36; 2, N.U., Kenny (6)(unassisted) 7:07; 3, B.C., Matt Glennon (5) (Jeff O'Neill, David Pergola) 8:43, 4, N.U., Matt Saunders (10) (O'Connor) 11:48 shg; 5, B.C., Marc Beran (7) (Emma) 15:34 ppg; 6, B.C., Sean Farley (2) (Beran) 18:30. Penalties--B.C., Marty McInnis (holding) 10:18; N.U., O'Connor (hitting from behind...
...government should determine that these arguments are invalid? Simple: just change the order. That can be done "at the whim of the President," says Michael Glennon, professor of law at the University of California at Davis. Capitol Hill sources assert that President Bush could issue a rewritten order, or, more likely, an "exception" to the standing one, and legally keep it secret. The only way to prevent that would be to write a prohibition against assassinations into law. After congressional investigations in the 1970s turned up evidence of CIA-sponsored assassination plots, attempts were made to enact such...