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If you consider winning the person who received the most votes, Baldwin won easily -- a landslide. My own view is that Bill made a more lasting contribution -- that to embrace despair of the sort encouraged by Baldwin was self defeating. But that was too esoteric a point for the Oxford crowd.
That would depend upon the subject of the debate.
The cast of Informed Debate - 2011 includes: Daryl Moon as himself
A guy who had a debate about Darwins theory
The cast of 1992 Vice Presidential Debate - 1992 includes: Hal Bruno as himself Al Gore as himself Dan Quayle as himself Jim Stockdale as himself
If you consider winning the person who received the most votes, Baldwin won easily -- a landslide. My own view is that Bill made a more lasting contribution -- that to embrace despair of the sort encouraged by Baldwin was self defeating. But that was too esoteric a point for the Oxford crowd.
Click here to read the Hansard transcript of the Commons debate.
William Wilberforce
William Lloyd Garrison was an abolitionist .
Definitely William Lane Craig, no question about it.
The National History Day (NHD) Contest proposes a series of sample topics, one among them entitled "Music Debated: The Buckley Report." NHD gives scant details on what the topic entails beyond the following sentence: "What about the 1955 debate proposing a connection between rock music and juvenile delinquency or The Buckley Report and the heated debate correlating rock music to drug abuse?"Given the lack of information and context, based on the title some students have conflated the topic as concerning only one historical item, but there are in fact two: the "1955 debate" and The Buckley Report. Given the name Buckley, some have assumed this refers to the conservative author and commentator William F. Buckley, Jr. It turns out that the Buckley in question is his brother, former Senator James L. Buckley, who investigated the topic in Congressional hearings in 1973. More details on can be found in a book on rock music called The Politics of Rock Music by John M. Orman (Nelson-Hall, 1984):"The Buckley Report: More elite response to rock music came in the form of a hearing by former Senator James Buckley ... and the relationship between rock music and the drug epidemic. Buckley started his investigation during the summer of 1973 in response to a column in the New York Times by former Nixon aide William Safire. He accused Columbia Records and its parent company CBS of engaging in payola..."Buckley was concerned that since rock had become the most popular form of entertainment according to economic figures and since rock music had special power over young people according to many rock critics, then the industry must show that it understands its special responsibility to American youth."The 1955 "debate" NHD refers to was in fact U.S. Senate Subcommittee hearings that attempted to link rock 'n' roll music and juvenile delinquency. The hearings are referenced in the book Popular Music and Society: Volume 14(4) (Bowling Green University Popular Press, Winter 1990). The full title of the subcommittee was Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency of the Committee on the Judiciary, which was charged with the task of the "investigation of juvenile delinquency in the United States."Was any of this material captured on this film? Given that both hearings occurred before the taping of Senate hearings or debates was commonplace, unless a news broadcaster at the time (ABC, NBC, etc.) filmed a portion for a nightly news segment, the answer would likely be no.
William Lane Craig won even Yusuf Ismail had the advantage of using the "question-only" approach. I don't like the format of the debate because it obviously gave the critics of trinity a pass and gave the burden of answering to William Lane Craig.
While there is some debate as to whether he was an Anglican (which is what he was openly) or a crypto-Catholic, it is very clear that William Shakespeare was not in any way Jewish.
William Tavoulareas has written: 'A debate on A time to choose' -- subject(s): Energy policy, Ford Foundation, Ford Foundation. Energy Policy Project
He did some time; there is debate whether or not Nixon pardoned him, as he was released early.
William Lourdayyan has written: 'Conversion debate and the holocaust' -- subject(s): Hinduism, Religious aspects, Christian converts from Hinduism, Caste, Religious aspects of Caste
Try the Buckley Report or PMRC (Parents Music Resource Center) hearings. There was a lot of debate through and after the 50's about whether rock and roll caused juvenile delinquency, drug use, etc.