Word: appointments
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Democratic congressmen last night denounced Nixon's plan to appoint a new prosecutor, charging that the President was giving no assurance the prosecutor will have a free hand...
Next week, Acting Atty. Gen. Robert H. Bork will appoint the successor to Archibald Cox '34, the special Watergate prosecutor fired by Nixon last Saturday...
...could not have been pleasing to the administration. Nixon decided over the weekend that a bi-partisan House inquiry and a friendlier judicial arrangement would be preferable to Archibald Cox and his staff of 80 crack lawyers examining all the president's activities and papers. If Congress tries to appoint a new special prosecutor, the president and the Republicans will be in a position to secure guarantees that the new attorneys are not "out to get the President...
...separate statement released late yesterday, three Law School professors said it is the legal and constitutional right of Congress to charge the judicial branch with power to appoint a prosecutor insulated from executive authority...
...Dart Industries' divisions are for sale "if the price is right." Conversely, he is looking for profitable acquisitions but pledges that they will be "low profile" so as not to rile the Justice Department. In the interim he has designed an unusual management structure: Chairman Dart declines to appoint a president, holding that position himself and relying on seven group presidents who enjoy great autonomy. Says the blunt-spoken Justin Dart: "I don't have time to louse up the operating groups and I am the only...