Word: accepter
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...share in the Stembler-Shelden Insurance Agency? Well, as a member of the Florida Railroad and Public Utilities Commission he had given the company a commission list of bus and truck carriers that might be interested in buying insurance. Did Mack not think it was at least indiscreet to accept an interest in Stembler-Shelden while a member of the Florida commission? The remarkable reply: "Well, I do not know. If Mr. Whiteside had given me $20,000 on which he paid the income tax, I think I would have taken it." Mack had never even seen the books...
...much the company was worth. He said Whiteside had just "informed me" about Andar, and "didn't ge into the details." What did all this add up to? Had it never even occurred to Richie Mack that it was highly improper for a Federal Communications Commissioner to accept thousands of dollars from a lawyer interested in a case before the FCC? Replied Witness Mack...
...Added Robert Lacoste, Minister for Algeria, who sometimes seems to think he is running French policy from Algiers: "Good offices consist purely and simply of putting the two parties in contact. They should not be confused with mediation or arbitration. A mediator suggests solutions; an arbitrator compels them. We accept neither one nor the other...
...complement the forbidden-zone scheme, France would like to see the establishment of a joint Franco-Tunisian commission to supervise the border area. Tunisia is unlikely to accept any such proposal. With 70,000 men, the F.L.N.'s army is one of the biggest in the Arab world, far overshadows the 6,200 lightly armed soldiers of the Tunisian army. If Bourguiba now agrees to help France end the traffic across the Tunisian-Algerian frontier, the F.L.N. and its Tunisian sympathizers could, and perhaps would, run him and his government out of office...
Krishnamachari himself recalled "some discussions" about stock purchases but "no order, no instructions." Unsympathetically, the judge found that Krishnamachari "must fully and squarely accept responsibility for what his ministry did," and Nehru immediately accepted Krishnamachari's resignation. The case confirmed what many Indian voters have long suspected-that the Congress Party has become negligent and arrogant in its long tenure of power. The charge of collusion had not been proved, but clear to all to see was the highhanded way in which a supposedly independent nationalized corporation had jumped to do a minister's bidding...