Word: respecters
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Griswold of Harvard Law School, at a meeting of the Massachusetts Bar Association on February 5, 1954, made an impressive and searching analysis of the Fifth Amendment, defending the Corporation's action, at least in so far as it effected the retention of persons invoking the privilege with respect to questions regarding past Communist Party membership. The speech was printed in the Harvard Law School Record for February 11, 1954, and excerpts were printed in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin for March...
...multitude of questions are asked (as in the game of Twenty Questions) the privilege should apply to all, indiscriminately, because answers to the non-incriminating ones might help a prosecutor to pin-point areas in which incriminating evidence could be found. Dean Griswold make a similar assertion with respect to the questioning of a witness about Party membership in each of a series of consecutive years. This contention presumes that the individual has been "in such a fix" that he could not safely answer all the questions, and at a time sufficiently recent to justify a reasonable belief that...
...appreciate Ferry's interest in them, and they think of him as a straightforward, frank man who will tell them directly if he thinks the cannot give them a recommendation, but who never gives a bad one. Their attitude toward him is one of warm affection rather than cold respect, and this regard is demonstrated each year when 50 or 60 members of the Winthrop House Alumni Committee return to see him at the Christmas dinner...
...McCarthy was a novice in the field of anti-Communism and sought advice from such "specialists" as Sokolsky. It was Sokolsky, his friends say, who brought Cohn and Schine to the attention of McCarthy and got them their jobs with the subcommittee. Ever since, Cohn has acknowledged his deep respect for Sokolsky, considers him a father-confessor available for consultation and advice. From Washington Cohn often phones Sokolsky in New York, and one newsman who admires both Sokolsky and McCarthy says, "Roy and Dave never made a move without consulting...
...summer's end, Mr. Hobbs decides that the age gap is too great for him to be a pal to his children or grandchildren, that his ties to them "can only be based on need or respect." He also decides, despite all its mishaps, that the summer was "hard to beat." But readers will find that Mr. Hobbs' Vacation has not even come close this time to beating Father of the Bride...