Word: law
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Haynsworth's cause. Minority Leader Hugh Scott has thus far supported the judge, but unhappily; up for re-election next year, Scott is not anxious to alienate blacks and union members in his industrial state by backing a jurist with an antilabor, anti-civil rights image (see THE LAW). Party loyalty could not hold either Assistant Minority Leader Robert Griffin of Michigan or Maine's Margaret Chase Smith, chairman of the Senate G.O.P. Conference. Both of them announced that they would vote against confirmation...
People were sent out not only to homes and apartment buildings, but to gas stations, shopping centers, and MBTA stops. The Law School had its own canvass project to leaflet commuters which began at 6 a.m. and ran until about 10 a.m. This group involved about 600 volunteers...
HUGH D. CALKINS '45, youngest Fellow of the Harvard Corporation, went to work at his Cleveland law office. Calkins-who is in the middle of a campaign for re-election to the Cleveland school board-did not join any formal Moratorium programs yesterday. But last week he helped draw up a plan to let each Cleveland school principal decide whether his school should observe the Moratorium...
DEREK C. BOK, Dean of the Law School, joined a panel in his home town. Belmont, to discuss the Moratorium, the draft, and questions of legitimate dissent. Bok spent the morning preparing for the three-hour panel session in the afternoon. Then he returned to the Law School to meet with his regular 4-6 p.m. class. At the request of his students-half of whom wanted the normal class to go on, and half wanting to join the Moratorium-Bok agreed to hold a class yester-day and a special make-up class next week...
ADAM YARMOLINSKY, professor of Law, gave the major address at a special program at Concord Academy. He said that "the only course left to us is to get out" of Vietnam, and that the money being used in the war should be spent at home...