Word: deeded
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Whether either subordinate would dare do such a deed without the President's knowledge seems doubtful, though not impossible. Either way, Nixon's case does not improve much. Surely neither Miss Woods nor Bull would have acted alone unless to protect the President from his words on the tape. Indeed, the theory most helpful to Nixon is that Bull might have acted to shield his old boss, Haldeman...
...Assistant Treasury Secretary and admitted that it was related to the investigation of Nixon's income tax deduction for donating his official papers to the Government. Morgan, who has testified in Congressman Mills' investigation of Nixon's taxes, had handled much of the transaction and had signed the deed transferring the papers for the President, possibly without authority. Investigators are not sure that the transaction was legally completed before a new law banned such deductions...
...Clemente property. In addition, both the IRS and Congress's Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation, which Nixon designated as the final arbiter of his tax problems, were investigating possible fraud in the gift of the papers. There is some question as to whether the deed for the documents, which was not received by the Government until almost nine months after the law permitting tax deductions for such gifts had been abolished by Congress, might have been predated to satisfy the missed deadline...
...deed for the material that Nixon's appraiser eventually chose to give was not delivered to the Archives until April 10, 1970 -almost nine months after the cutoff date. Senate investigators are looking into the possibility that the deed, which was signed by Nixon legal aides rather than the President himself, might have been predated. Over the next four years Nixon used the gift of the papers to avoid $235,000 in income taxes that he otherwise would have owed...
...clearly demonstrates the continuing insensitivity of the Administration to the spirit necessary for an Affirmative Action Plan which will be acceptable to both minorities and women, as well as to HEW. Equity is not a sometime thing but a matter which must be made evident by thought word and deed, in public and in private, by every single one of us in the University. Perhaps the letter of the law would be easier to achieve if the spirit of it became a part of everyday thinking and speaking. Elizabeth M. Dunn