Word: counsel
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...also seems to have been Lowell who decided over the strenuous objections of the defense that the hearings were not to be held in public. Defense counsel was allowed to be present at the examination of most witnesses, but not at those of Judge Thayer and the jury. This was a great handicap to the defense; so much of the case depended on the question of Judge Thayer's prejudice, and so much of the committee's report was based on the jurors' simple statement that they were not prejudiced by the judge's attitude, that defense counsel, not knowing...
Fifteen Harvard, Yale, and Columbia law students will work this summer on a civil rights project in Washington and in Greenville and Jackson, Miss. The project, financed by private funds, is being organized by William L. Higgs, a Mississippi attorney and former counsel to James Meredith...
DuPont and Supino acted as counsel for the FCC. The were opposed by Katrina Renouf and Fred C. Scribner III, who served as advocates for a South Carolina radio station which was appealing the FCC's decision not to renew its license. The case was heard by the "United States Court of Appeals for the District of Ames Circuit," which included White, Judge Elpert P. Tuttle of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, and Judge Sterry R. Waterman, of the Second Circuit Court...
Each Club spent an hour delivering its presentation, and responding to the judges' questions and objections. At issue was the FCC's right to grant or revoke a station's license on the basis of its programming. Counsel for the appellant (the radio station) maintained that its client's rights under the First Amendment had been infringed by the Commission...
...headed up to Capitol Hill for what promised to be a rough grilling by the House Information Subcommittee on the subject of "managed news,"-Pentagon Press Secretary Arthur Sylvester was given some sage advice by a coworker. "Never, under any circumstances whatsoever, use the word lie," urged Defense Department Counsel John McNaughton. "Don't use it negatively, don't use it positively. If you have to tell the committee you want to lie down, say recline...