Word: hearings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Supported by private industries and a $200,000 Labor Department grant, Obinani and his trainees have begun establishing corporations that, will create jobs within the ghetto. Sixteen trainees are working with the Bed-ford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation and have established community centers to hear an act on residents' complaints...
...long legal duel. The five defendants--Spock, Yale Chaplain William Sloan Coffin, Harvard graduate student Michael K. Ferber, writer Mitchell Goodman, and former National Security Council staffer Marcus Raskin--were all there, each with one or more attorneys. So were Judge Francis J.W. Ford, who will hear the case, and assistant U.S. attorney John Wall, who will argue the government's side, at least at first. In addition, there was the usual knot of reporters and a few miscellaneous onlookers, including Jessica Mitfrord, author of The American Way of Death, and Col. Paul W. Feeney, director of the Massachusetts Selective...
...struggle for equality-and have allowed the movement to fall into militant secular hands. Like many white churches, Negro congregations have found themselves alienated from skeptical youth-and teen-age looters in the recent riots were clearly not guided by obedience to the Ten Commandments. "They don't hear you when you say, Thou shalt not kill,'" admits the Rev. Clyde Williams of Atlanta. "They say, 'We've tried love and that didn't get us anything...
...hear some papers complain, the American Bar Association's new guidelines on press coverage of criminal cases will repeal the First Amendment and return the Inquisition. Some lawyers have cited the rules in attempts to get trials closed to reporters. Exasperated, the author of the guidelines, Massachusetts Judge Paul Reardon, has advised everyone to calm down...
...defendants except Michael K. Ferber 2G were present in the U.S. District Court to hear their attorneys claim that their actions were protected under the First Amendment's guarantees of free speech, and that the indictment was so defective that it should be dismissed...