Word: morrison
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...song). He spoke of his trips around the country, noting that every different racial and cultural group has "something to say." If an acquaintance with customs and beliefs of the people of American and the world propagates any specific doctrine, then Seeger's songs were propaganda songs. . . . Andrew P. Morrison...
Philip J. Andrews '57; Phillip R. Burnham, '56; Kenneth B. Culbert '55 (captain); Robert Gilmor, Jr. '57; David C. Jordan '57; Edward V. Keating, Jr. '56; Leonard M. Miller '55; Peter F. Morrison '56; Michael L. Murray '57; Robert Wynne '57; W. C. Burris Young '55 (manager...
Laborite Leader Clement Attlee smoked his pipe and doodled while the right-wingers, led by Heir Apparent Herbert Morrison and Heir Apparent II Hugh Gaitskell, pressed for outright expulsion. But Clem Attlee, the man who had backed the disciplining of Bevan in the first place, pulled the pipe from his mouth and made a surprise proposal: postpone expulsion and set up a committee to inquire whether Nye Bevan might not be brought into line with party discipline. The right-wingers fought, but lost. With Attlee voting for Bevan, the National Executive decided, 14 to 13, to stay Nye Bevan...
This time Labor's right wing had fire in its eyes. Chief among the determined were aging (67), Cockney-born Herbert Morrison, deputy leader and presumed heir to Clement Attlee, and brightly ambitious Hugh Gaitskell, the relatively young (48) and clever former economics professor who was Labor's last Chancellor of the Exchequer and aspires to be something higher. Troublemaker Bevan must go, they argued, for the good of the party...
...Keating (123), Mike Holmes (137) Dave Jordan (147) Len Miller (157), Casper Cronk (167), and Unlimited Pete Morrison lost his preliminary bout...