haulin oats
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Hope he can keep that program headed in the right direction.Tony Gwynn. I can't find a linked story but it's all over Twitter. He just signed an extension 4 days ago to stay on as SDSU's baseball coach.
Hope he can keep that program headed in the right direction.Tony Gwynn. I can't find a linked story but it's all over Twitter. He just signed an extension 4 days ago to stay on as SDSU's baseball coach.
Wait, what?!
Dan Patrick Show and NBC Sports have said that the Padres media relations confirmed.
Goffin married King in 1959 while they were in their teens. He penned more than 50 top 40 hits, including Pleasant Valley Sunday for the Monkees, Crying in the Rain by the Everly Brothers, Take Good Care of My Baby by Bobby Vee and You've Got a Friend by James Taylor.
Is spying for an ally treason?On this day in 1953 atomic spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were put to death in the electric chair at Sing Sing. Still guilty as charged all these years later. Good riddance.
http://www.realclearhistory.com/2014/06/19/rosenbergs_still_guilty_after_all_2652.html
Is spying for an ally treason?
No doubt they were paid by the Soviets, but treason means aiding and abetting your enemies in times of war. The Soviet Union was our "friend" when the Rosenbergs spied. They were not our allies when the trial (amid the Red Scare) took place.
I dunno. Let's dig 'em up and ask. Or was that a rhetorical question? They richly deserved what they got.
It matters naught whether the Soviets were 'frenemies' or enemies when the Rosenbergs and their ilk handed over US nuclear secrets as casually as if they were a blue ribbon apple pie recipe. That was classified information that they had no right to divulge to any foreign government.
I get the drift that you're objecting not to their conviction, but to the federal government's use of capital punishment. I suppose that is another debate entirely, though we all know what OP's position will be - Ol' Sparky was too kind, and their bodies should've been shipped to the Soviet Union to be buried underneath the Kremlin.![]()
Absolutely true. But it wasn't treason, as defined by the Constitution.It matters naught whether the Soviets were 'frenemies' or enemies when the Rosenbergs and their ilk handed over US nuclear secrets as casually as if they were a blue ribbon apple pie recipe. That was classified information that they had no right to divulge to any foreign government.
I get the drift that you're objecting not to their conviction, but to the federal government's use of capital punishment. I suppose that is another debate entirely, though we all know what OP's position will be - Ol' Sparky was too kind, and their bodies should've been shipped to the Soviet Union to be buried underneath the Kremlin.![]()
Gawd, I hope not.Well I can plainly see that this is going to devolve into something stupid real soon.
Kwolek made her discovery in the mid-1960s while working on specialty textile fibers, according to DuPont's website. She invented a liquid crystalline solution that could be spun into the exceptionally strong fibers now used worldwide in police and military protective equipment.
I'm with OP on that one.
Did you read "The Implosion Conspiracy"? Details the whole trial and execution.
The authors conclusion was guilty as charged, but execution was, if you pardon the expression, overkill.