Word: coxes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Though he did not control the committee, Rayburn usually managed, down to 1959, to find a way to bring to the floor any bill that he really wanted to see get there. Georgia's late Eugene Cox, longtime leader of the Southerners on the Rules Committee, had a deep affection for Rayburn, often at Rayburn's urging voted in committee for a bill that he would vote against on the floor. After Cox died in 1952 and Judge Smith succeeded him as captain of the Southern conservatives, Rayburn sometimes managed to get help from Republicans on the committee...
Behind Vehslage, the Intercollegiate champion, and Zug, a former National Junior Titlist, the Tigers' quality drops off somewhat. Steve Cox, Bart McGuire, and Cameron MacRae--all probable starters for Princeton--are sophomores, and reportedly have not acquired experience at quite the same rate as the sophomores on the Crimson team...
Last night he would say only that he had "no plans to leave right now." It has been customary for faculty members rumored for posts in Washington to say nothing themselves to the press. However, nearly all such speculations--including reports about McGeorge Bundy, David E. Bell, Archibald Cox '34, and Stanley S. Surrey--have eventually become official appointments...
...other U.S. campus stands to lose as many faculty men to the Kennedy "brain tryst." Three are gone: Economist David E. Bell (Budget Director), Law Professor Archibald Cox (Solicitor General), and Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences McGeorge Bundy (Special Assistant for National Security Affairs). Four more are reportedly to be named to still unassigned jobs: Professors Abram Chayes, John K. Galbraith, Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and Stanley Surrey. If conservative Harvard-men shudder at the rumor that New Deal-ish Historian Schlesinger may wind up as Commissioner of Internal Revenue, they try to balance the notion with...
Three Law School professors in addition to Cox will reportedly have posts in the new administration. They include Abram J. Chayes '43, professor of Law, who may already have been appointed legal advisor in the State Department; Louis Loss, professor of Law, who has been mentioned as Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission; and Stanley S. Surrey, Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Professor of Law, who may become assistant secretary of the Treasury Department...