Word: coxes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...cafeteria, where he chats and jokes with the waitresses. When among the other justices, he constantly but cordially tries to win them over to his views. And when he propounds or defends those views, he becomes a tiger. Last week, as Chief Justice Warren and Solicitor General Archibald Cox marked Black's 25th year with praise for his "unflagging devotion to the Constitution of the U.S.," Black sank back in his chair, expressionless and embarrassed. But later in the morning, when it came time to read his opinion on school prayers, he came alive with force and eloquence, happy...
Just when Kennedy was trying to calm the business community,* Solicitor General Archibald Cox betook himself back to Harvard for a speech calculated to make any businessman blanch with dismay. His message: a way must be found to bring Government into wage-and-price-making decisions on a regular basis and at ''a fairly early stage" in the process. It may be enough for now that the Government "make known, widely and forcefully, the general policies that it thinks would advance the public interest." said Cox, but "there are a number of reasons for thinking that...
Flaunting the Forbidden. The President was irritated by Cox's speech. But the Administration had had plenty of opportunity to block it. When Justice Department Press Secretary Ed Guthman showed an advance copy of the speech to Washington reporters, they immediately warned that it would raise a ruckus. With that advice in hand. Guthman took the speech to Cox's Justice Department boss. Bobby read it, approved it, and told Cox to go right ahead...
Archibald Cox, solicitor general of the United States, will deliver what may well be a major Administration address at the annual combined luncheon of the Harvard foundation for advanced study and research and the Harvard Law School alumni association, at noon in Harkness Quadrangle of the graduate center...
Apparently the less tarnished, Connally emerged the winner. His political mentor, Lyndon Johnson, thus tightened his grip on the Texas Democratic organization. In November Connally will learn just how much the fratricidal name calling has hurt him: he will face conservative Republican Jack Cox, 40, a onetime Democrat who switched to the G.O.P. and is trying to persuade Texas to do the same...