Word: frequently
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Active in Republican politics and a frequent advocate before Italian groups for such presidential candidates as Thomas Dewey, Wendell Willkie and Dwight Eisenhower, Sirica was appointed a federal judge by Eisenhower in 1957. "Hell, yes, I'm a Republican," he still says. "You can't change a fellow's feelings just because you give him a judicial robe. But when I get on the bench, then I'm nothing. Politics is out then. Then it's my duty to search for the truth...
...plastics are made. Autos will almost surely be shorter in front and rear and roomier inside. They will probably be more expensive but possibly built to last longer; annual model changes are already becoming less pronounced, and the public is likely to be more impressed with quality construction than frequent cosmetic restyling. Says AMC's Chapin: "I think we're headed toward smaller, more efficient automobiles, including cars that perform specific functions better. By that, I'm thinking of cars particularly suited to our urban life, more resistant to the abuses that a car gets in traffic and parking...
...have looked the other way. Explains one candid building official: "Sure, they are violating the law. But there are laws against ladies' hatpins in theaters and spitting on the sidewalks, too." But living on the ground floor in the central city has its drawbacks. There are still frequent robberies in the area; some tenants are now barring their windows and doors. Freelance Writer Gretchen Brown wards off burglars as well as Peeping Toms with heavy wooden shutters. When she first moved in, Book Designer Muriel Underwood had to discourage passers-by who tried to enter to buy the spider...
Dawn is still some time away when newsmen in radio stations across the country begin to comb the wire-service bulletins and newspapers for the makings of their early programs. Their reach is enormous,* but the product is generally predictable. At its frequent worst, radio news consists of clatters and bleeps strung together by an announcer who has learned to rip and read wire-service copy. Even the morning shows of larger independent stations and network affiliates rarely rise above an intelligent presentation of the moment's headlines...
Haig's testimony was full of minor conflicts with what Presidential Lawyer J. Fred Buzhardt had previously said, and contained frequent memory lapses remarkable in a bright West Point graduate who was noted for his organizational competence as Henry Kissinger's longtime aide. For example, he could not recall what he discussed with Nixon, Rose Mary Woods and Press Secretary Ron Ziegler during a 24-minute conference the evening of the day he told Nixon that the gap on the tape lasted for 18 minutes-just three weeks before his courtroom appearance. Often Haig fidgeted, toying with...