Word: evenhandedness
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DIED. Ray H. Jenkins, 83, Tennessee lawyer who was the tough, evenhanded counsel to a Senate subcommittee during its 1954 hearings on charges that Senator Joseph R. McCarthy had sought special treatment from the Army for a former aide; of pneumonia; in Knoxville, Tenn.
Sullivan, the only tenant on the city council, added, "The board's mission is not to be evenhanded. It must decide cases fairly, but its mission is to protect tenants."
On the more important question of Madame Blavatsky's occult powers, Biographer Meade takes a view that will seem evenhanded to most readers who are not Theosophists (the society persists throughout the world, including New York City, where it was founded, Lon don, where Blavatsky had her wildest suc...
After next month's meetings were announced, a senior White House official declared: "We have now come to a point at which both the Egyptians and the Israelis confront the need to make some tough decisions." Despite that evenhanded appraisal, the White House feels that Sadat has conformed to...
(5 of 10) to the decade-long Soviet military buildup). Irritating Moscow too was the prospect that while it was not going to get most-favored-nation trading benefits from Washington, it seemed certain that Peking was going to get them. That would violate the principle of'evenhanded' treatment of...