Word: laws
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Jackie Onassis? Would he have announced to the world at large that this poor widow was "free to marry whomsoever she likes" and that talk of her being a sinner was "nonsense"? If he replied no, then he would have been guilty of believing in one law for the rich and one for the poor. If he replied yes, he evidently would not believe in the fundamental tenets of the church in which he holds so eminent a position...
...legal interpretation came from the Boston law firm of Hill & Barlow. It was retained by HUC for what President Stephen H. Kaplan called "a substantial...
Once the comic opera and the skin scenes are out of the way, it's time to have the confrontation between DeSalvo and John Bottomley, the dogged law-professor-cum--special investigator, (Henry Fonda plus moustache) who has been commissioned to track the killer down. Aside from a brief interlude in which Bottomley confesses his secret worry--"I'm beginning to like this"--to his wife, the interrogation and, predictably and inevitably, the breakdown of DeSalvo takes place against a searingly white background. Once you've mulled for six or seven seconds over the symbolic significance of the white...
...Satinov an M.I.T. resistance leader. The doctor telephoned federal authorities from his home to find out how long O'Conner could stay there. The authorities told the physician that they were coming to arrest O'Conner. After the threat, O'Conner called his lawyer, Edward Sherman, a fourth year law student and teaching fellow at Harvard, Satinov said. Sherman advised him to return immediately to M.I.T. O'Conner returned to his sanctuary and the doctor called the authorities back to tell them O'Conner had left...
...riot Newark. The characters refer to black people as "blacks" and white people as "honkies." Still, I have my doubts as to whether Hoye actually knows any more about the ghetto than Spiro Agnew. His one-act play is not about black power or slum despair or even law and order as much as he would like us to believe it is. Rather, it is the story of a simple white bigot whose son rejects him and then sets out to destroy...