Word: katzenbachs
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...Donald F. Turner, 44, Harvard Law professor, will become Assistant U.S. Attorney General in charge of the antitrust division. A Phi Beta Kappa (Northwestern), Turner took a Ph.D. in economics at Harvard, earned a law degree at Yale, where he met Nicholas Katzenbach, now Attorney General. Turner was Katzenbach's personal choice to replace William Orrick, who is resigning. A consultant to both the Government and private industry in top antitrust cases, Turner has written widely on the subject, is considered an expert with a tough approach. In Antitrust Policy: An Economic and Legal Analysis, a book that Turner...
...Senator Philip Hart. But when the bill was ready for the Senate floor, the anti-poll-tax proposal ran into the opposition of the very men most instrumental in drawing up the original voting bill-Republican Minority Leader Everett Dirksen, Democratic Majority Leader Mike Mansfield and Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach. They argued that since poll taxes in federal elections had been abolished by constitutional amendment, abolishing them in state elections by statute might be ruled unconstitutional...
Appearing on a recent national TV program, U.S. Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach was asked if the FBI had infiltrated the K.K.K. Replied he: "Yes. At times I think we know more about what the Klan is doing than we know about what some divisions of the Justice Department are doing...
...this time several high officials, such as Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach and James Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, had departed silently, and reporters had slipped into growing numbers of vacant chairs around the coffin-shaped table. Near the end of the session, Busby called upon Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman, who turned out to be the showstopper...
...shut the door of every courthouse except that in the District of Columbia." He also pointed out that the rules of the D.C. district court allow witnesses to be subpoenaed only from within the District and a radius of 100 miles around it. To Ervin's general contention, Katzenbach replied that the record shows that Southern states "don't hesitate to come here to the Supreme Court" to argue their appeals in integration cases...