Word: chamberses
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This counterrevolution of the intellectuals was [presaged] by one of the most vivid events of my time. It involved, coincidentally, an editor of TIME magazine, Whittaker Chambers, [the late former Communist] who in public testimony in 1948 named former high U.S. Government officials as spies . . . [Later] Chambers would write that...
Armed with placards and resolve, an angry group of local parents and their children stalked through the Cambridge City Council chambers last night to protest the School Committee's decision not to rehire the school system's highest administrator.
The White House is modest by the palatial standards of Europe and Asia and especially dwarfed by the Chinese and Soviet ceremonial chambers. That is its charm. When people travel here from across the country, they shed jealousies and politics and prejudices. They crowd around the fires that subdue the...
It was a bad week for plumbing: leaks damaged two dozen federal buildings in Washington, D.C., and broken pipes caused perhaps $200,000 in damage to the Ohio Supreme Court chambers. More than 700 water mains broke in Fort Worth, causing the system to hemorrhage water twice as fast as...
We cannot separate our present holiday celebrations from our historical legacy. To deny such roots is to disown the origin of our American culture. The Supreme Court wisely considered the arguments in deciding Marsh v. Chambers (1983). In Marsh, the Court permitted the Nebraska legislature to continue opening its sessions...