Word: warrener
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Says Correspondent Russell Warren Howe, New York correspondent for the London Sunday Times: "If Mr. Faulkner no longer agrees with the more Dixiecratic of his statements I, for one, am very glad, but that is what he said...
...touchy Fifth Amendment issue. Actually, the decision had narrow application. It dealt only with the New York City charter provision-and only to the extent that Slochower had not been given a hearing and had, therefore, been denied due process of law. The opinion (Chief Justice Earl Warren and Justices Hugo Black, Felix Frankfurter and William O. Douglas concurring) was, in fact, careful to point out: "This is not to say that Slochower has a constitutional right to be an associate professor of German at Brooklyn College. The state has broad powers in the selection and discharge of its employees...
Robert E. Barnett '57, Robert A. Bowman '56, Robert D. Canty '57, Robert A. Hastings '57, Philip C. Haughey '57, Richard K. Hurley '57, Warren Kantrowitz '56 (captain), Lewis D. Lowenfels '57, Alvin N. Lubetkin '56, Anthony T. Massari '58, William R. Riggs '56, Arnold M. Kagan '56 (manager...
...Congress," said Chief Justice Warren in delivering the majority opinion, "intended to occupy the field of sedition" when it passed the 1940 Smith Act and succeeding anti-subversive statutes. State laws are "in no sense uniform," and their enforcement could present "serious danger of conflict" with federal antisubversion operations. In the strongest dissent that Earl Warren has ever faced, Justices Stanley Reed, Sherman Minton and Harold Burton argued that "in the responsibility of national and local governments to protect themselves against sedition, there is no 'dominant interest' . . . Congress has not, in any of its statutes relating to sedition...
Metropolitan Opera (Sat. 2 p.m., ABC). IlTrovatore, with Milanov, Rankin, Baum, Warren...