Word: hayakawa
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Arizona and North Dakota have moved to raise their limits, but only if the federal maximum is raised or repealed. And, in fact, Republican S.I. Hayakawa recently introduced a repeal bill in the U.S. Senate. Yet the Reagan Administration does not intend to press the issue, even though last year's Republican Party platform included a call for removal of the national 55 m.p.h. limit. The federal official in charge of making the limit stick, Highway Administrator Ray Barnhart, is a reluctant taskmaster. Says he: "I think it's a stinking law, but I'm going...
...true." Pro-life activists have publicly targeted twelve pro-choice Senators for defeat in 1982, including Ted Kennedy, Daniel Moynihan of New York and S.I. Hayakawa of California...
Knowing that S.I. Hayakawa has a reputation for snoozing through committee hearings, would-be Senators are lining up for his job. Maureen Reagan, Governor Jerry Brown, and Congressman Barry Goldwater Jr. have all been mentioned as candidates. Last week Gore Vidal, 55, author (Burr, The Best Man) and perennial talk-show guest, tossed his hat into the ring because, he says, "I'm terrified at the caliber of people in politics." By way of example, Vidal cites President Reagan's Inaugural Address: "It had all the resonance of a Brim coffee commercial." Besides a certain verbal flair, Vidal...
...foreign policy views, then on his actions as Richard Nixon's chief of staff during the final months of the Watergate crisis. So four days before the hearing opened, he met privately with Republican Senators on the committee to work out what Californian S.I. Hayakawa delicately called "friendly" answers to the expected hostile questions. But when Alexander Meigs Haig Jr., Ronald Reagan's nominee for Secretary of State, finally sat down last week at the green baize covered conference table in packed Room 1202 of the Dirksen Office Building and faced the committee's 17 members...
While Anderson's program at least tries to help the retired and working people it hurts, it does nothing for the unemployed. Plain-speaking Sen. Sam Hayakawa (D-Cal.) was castigated for saying that the poor don't need to drive to work, not having jobs; Anderson implicitly makes the same assumption. Gasoline rationing would be the most fair and direct approach to short-run conservation--true plain dealing...