Word: amendmenteers
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In opening the affirmative argument for the University, Slater Washburn '20 maintained that though he held no case for the liquor traffic, there are four distinct objections to the 18th Amendment in that it is too radical and sudden a change, encourages attempts to violate the law, discriminates in favor...
Maintaining that the Amendment should not be repealed. Lewis Miller Stevens '20, the first Princeton speaker argued that the affirmative must show net only that the measure is unwise but why is should not be given at least a trail especially, since every other form of prohibition has proved a...
At 8 o'clock tonight, in Cambridge, Princeton, and New Haven, teams representing the three universities will meet in the 11th triangular debate, on the question: "Resolved, that the 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution should be abolished." In the contest with Yale, which will take place in Sanders...
Andrew J. Peters '95, Mayor of Boston, will preside at the Cambridge debated in the Yale-Princeton-Harvard triangular series on May 2. The debate will be upon the Prohibition Amendment to the Constitution. Tickets for the debate are now obtainable at Amee Brothers, Cooperative Branch, Kent's, and Herrick...
The question for this year's debate is: Resolved, that the 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution should be repealed." Due to the fact that national prohibition goes into effect on July 1, the question is one of unusual interest.