Word: mr
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...read constituted action worthy of the headline "Shame," nor even, as you concluded, behavior suggesting "that their objections to the war are hardly as serious or sincere as they would have us believe." And I appeal to your judgment that their silence was equivalent to a decision "to emulate Mr. Johnson's notorious behavior...
Born in 1919 in Philadelphia, Pa., Riesman received his A.B. and LL.B. at Harvard in 1931 and 1934 respectively. Lawyer, educator, Social Scientist, Riesman served as Law Clerk to Mr. Justice Brandeis in 1935-36 before he became a professor of Law at the University of Buffalo the following year. Riesman has been at Harvard since...
...Edward Purcell--got the Johnson treatment. Critics in varying degrees of the Administration's war, they were invited to a private briefing by the President after sending the White House a letter of concern several weeks earlier. It is quite evident that they were honored with two hours of Mr. Johnson's time only because they were thought to represent the anxiety prevalent in the Harvard community...
...order to gain access to the President's inner thoughts, however, the Faculty members have decided to pay the price of giving their community the silent treatment. Their unfortunate decision to emulate Mr. Johnson's notorious behavior suggests that their objections to the war are hardly as serious or sincere as they would have us believe...
...marriage embarrassing. (In any event, as of this week Rusk has outlasted all but six of his predecessors.) But the mere fact that the hint of resignation was reported, and allowed to go undenied by both Rusk and the White House, underscored the kind of pressure that the new Mr. and Mrs. Smith knowingly accepted...