Word: reopening
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...Senate Judiciary Committee promptly announced that it would reopen hearings on the ITT matter. Most immediately on the spot is Kleindienst, who was asked about White House influence on the ITT decisions when he sought confirmation as Attorney General in March 1972. Said he at that time: "I was not interfered with by anybody at the White House. I was not pressured. I was not directed." But Kleindienst insisted last week that he had not perjured himself, since he thought the committee questions were aimed at the later out-of-court negotiations with ITT rather than the earlier decision...
...liberal Cambridge Civic Association (CCA) based its 1971 campaign on a pledge to fire Frisoli and reopen the nation-wide search for a new superintendent. The CCA won a majority on the school board, and after extensive citizen interviews of prospective superintendents, Alflorence Cheatham replaced Frisoli last fall...
...Friday, Oct. 5, Agnew gave the word to reopen the negotiations to Judah Best, his Washington lawyer. Best immediately got in touch again with Fred Buzhardt, who was in Key Biscayne. Both men are fond of direct action and short, pungent phrases, and they understood each other completely. Buzhardt was definitely interested in talking. That night Best grabbed a plane to Florida and the two men met in a Miami motel in the predawn hours. Their approach was simple: let's get off dead center-the country requires that something be done. After their talk, Buzhardt called the Justice...
...themselves. All the evidence last week pointed to a grim fact: civilian-led democratic government in Chile has no priority at all for the junta. The earliest estimate for national elections was in three to five years, and even that was a guess. By the time the polls reopen, Chileans may be too deep into dictatorship to remember the old days of democracy that ended so suddenly two weeks ago in blood and smoke...
With the Federal Power Commission: Scenic Hudson has appealed a Federal Power Commission decision not to reopen licensing hearings for the Con Ed project. In its petitions, the environmentalists charged that additional evidence--such as that of potentially large fish kills in the Hudson River--makes a reconsideration of the license necessary. The FPC turned down the original petition and appeal for rehearing. The case is now pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit...