Word: judgeships
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Neither the White House nor ITT had any comment on the Colson memo last week; neither did McLaren, who on Dec. 2, 1971, was appointed by President Nixon to a federal judgeship. Colson, however, insisted that as "a good staff guy," he had merely been playing the part of "a devil's advocate"-outlining the problems that the Judiciary Committee might raise "in their worst context...
Much of the Senate opposition to Gray is rooted in his lack of law-enforcement experience. Gray, who became a lawyer while on active duty with the Navy in 1949, retired after 20 years of military service in 1960. He was nominated for a federal judgeship, but because of his meager qualifications, th nomination was withdrawn before the American Bar Association could officially act upon it. He and Nixon had met at a Washington cocktail party in 1947, and the two have been on friendly terms ever since...
...heated nine-month trial before Judge Harold Medina, McGohey persisted through uproarious courtroom disruptions in pressing for the conviction of the U.S. Communist Party's national board. The case ended in jail terms for the defendants, and McGohey was rewarded for his victory with a federal judgeship...
...Herald's circulation of 192,000 (the Globe sells 417,000 on weekdays, 546,000 on Sundays). The Globe has been steadily improving for several years. It won a Pulitzer Prize in 1966 for its coverage of the Kennedy family's efforts to promote a federal judgeship for an old retainer, and picked up another this spring for an expose of corruption in Somerville, Mass. "The death of the Herald" says Winship, "should enable us to put out a much better newspaper." As a first step, he has hired nine of the Herald's best people. Winship...
...said that most Law Reviewers are concerned mostly with prestige and achievement, and that most aspire towards membership on a law faculty or a judgeship or political position...