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Strength
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Documents | Actions |
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person
the author
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Political constituent petitioner |
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1 |
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir (page 318) recounting the author's high school years in the mid-1950s. The text details the author's leadership of the 'Inter-Yeshiva High School Council' and their successful postcard campaign lobbying the United Nations and Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge against a World Calendar Reform proposal that would have disrupted the Jewish Sabbath. While part of a House Oversight release (indicated by the footer), the specific content is historical and does not mention Epstein.
This document discusses the distinction between the First Amendment right to heckle a speaker versus silencing them entirely, referencing the Bruce Franklin case involving Henry Cabot Lodge at Stanford in 1971. It contrasts the ACLU's past defense of limited disruption with a later refusal by the Southern California branch to apply the same principles during a disruption of Michael Oren's speech at the University of California at Irvine.
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