Word: counsel
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Committee's counsel, Alfred M. Nittles '36, was more interested in the organizations to which Lynn belonged than in his reasons for joining them. Nittle's questions about Cuba dealt mostly with Americans Lynn might have seen there, and not at all with the country itself. Only occasionally was the witness provided room to express a substantive point of view, and then his statements were overlooked...
Rockefeller urged the creation of "an overall Hemisphere Business Committee to advise on matters of broad policy. Then local committees could be set up in each nation to counsel government bodies. They would work with government planning offices to make sure that programs are realistic, and arrive at a satisfactory development effort between private and public activities." This kind of mechanism, concluded Rockefeller, "could help redress the balance which has thus far been heavily weighted on the government side. And it could accelerate economic growth, the all-important objective on which the Alliance's record has been least satisfactory...
...University has bid $667,000 for an additional 61,000 square feet of the Bennett St. MTA Yards put up for sale by the Authority three weeks ago, MTA General Counsel Edward J. McLaughlin announced yesterday...
Diefenbaker rose with all the studied ire of a prosecution counsel and cut Pearson's arguments to shreds. Two weeks later, Diefenbaker called another election, and emerged from it with the most lopsided majority in Canadian history. 208 seats to the Liberals' 49. From that campaign. John Diefenbaker developed the theory, which he confidently clung to ever after, that he had an unfaltering political touch and a whammy on Lester Pearson...
...support of the central cast never waned. Lady Sangazure (Susan Bly), Sir Marmaduke (Lucian Russell), the Counsel (Philip Hartman), the Page (Jeffrey Cobb), and the chorus all added fine moments to the show. But here I suspect much of the genius - and there are bits of action that are genius - rests largely with the stage director, David Mills. If he is responsible for the choreography of the chorus, he deserves congratulations; if he created the gestures, the Victorian self-mockery, the hands that reach out of the curtain so that things conveniently disappear, he merits...