Word: grounds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Secretary of State Dean Rusk at week's end gingerly held out the possibility of a brief pax in hello-on the ground and in the air-over Christmas and, seven weeks later, during Tet, the Vietnamese New Year. Rusk pointedly withheld any promise of an extended unilateral truce. "We ought to distinguish," he added, "between what might happen at Christmas and the idea of a general pause." The Administration maintains that the bombing is essential since it ties down 100,000 North Vietnamese in repair work and disrupts the flow of men and matériel. By contrast...
...returned from Viet Nam, translated this argument into flesh-and-blood terms last week. "The bombing," he reported, "is substantially slowing down the infiltration of men and supplies into South Viet Nam, and the slowdown has saved an awful lot of lives of Marines and Army soldiers on the ground." The price of another long pause would thus be prohibitively high unless the other side responds in kind. From Hanoi to date there has been only silence on this score...
...policy of subpoenaing for student membership lists pernicious. If HUAC does serve such a subpoena here, the University should go to court. The Supreme Court has ruled against attempts by Southern states to subpoena membership lists of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on the ground that they violated freedom of association. It is possible that a challenge to HUAC's subpoenas would would be supported by the courts for the same reason. In any event, the University should not give up the lists without a fight...
Columbia demonstrated a potent ground attack for the first time last Saturday, and it already has an able quarterback in Marty Domres. Brown's Jack McMahon is an admirable quarterback, and Joe Randall is unquestionably the best punter in the League. Two players will not change an outcome, however, and Columbia will gain its second victory, in the vicinity...
...when she remarries-and does not revive even if her new marriage turns out to be a nullity. New Yorker Harry Herscher happily quit paying his ex-wife Alice $125 a week when he discovered that she had been remarried for 68 weeks. Alice reclaimed alimony on a compelling ground: her second husband had not been divorced from a previous wife and her second marriage was void. Too bad, ruled New York Civil Court Judge Sidney H. Asch. Since Alice "intended to abrogate her right to support" when she remarried, Harry is off the hook for good...