Word: legalizes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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However, the bill does keep the SACB alive until the day when public opinion, stirred by continued Vietnam war protests and Negro violence, might tolerate the prosecution of "subversives." Although organizations could fight the SACB in court, such legal action requires much time and money. Many groups went bankrupt fighting the strictures of the 1950 Internal Security Act. And if Ramsey Clark has to report to Congress, he may be pressured to work with the SACB. Senator Dirksen has said that he will make sure the Attorney General carries out the provisions...
Melvin Wulf, legal head of the ACLU, said the indictments mark a "major escalation in the administration's war against dissent" and that the indictments are unconstitutional...
Since 1964 Lowenstein has worked as legal counsel to his family's restaurant business in New York. He also has run for Congress once from the upper West Side (coming very close to winning); started one of the first groups to protest the war during the late summer of 1965 (Americans for a Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy); and has been elected to the national board of SANE, the vice chairmanship of the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA), the board of the Rev. Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and now the co-chairmanship of the Conference...
...Hayes's father). The two were drawn together by the idea of bringing foundations to the average well-off citizen. If such big shots as the Kennedys and the Johnsons could set up tax-free trusts and foundations, why couldn't the middle shots? After examining the legal details with care, Walsh and Hayes concluded that there was no reason in the world why they couldn't. Through ABC, the two have undertaken to spread their discovery to anyone willing to pay a fee that runs as high...
...this he pays no income tax, since ABC contends that it legally amounts to expenses and grants of the charitable foundation. The result is that the salary he used to earn and get taxed on is now protected; he pays taxes on only a fraction. When he dies, he leaves no large estate to be taxed; the money is still in the foundation, which has merely lost its most treasured trustee but which can easily replace him with someone else like, say, his son. The obvious attractions of the idea have brought ABC at least 250 members...