Word: spacing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Where to cut? Most members of Congress oppose amputation of major programs. Instead, critics insist that the Administration can judiciously defer or slow down spending in nonessential areas and still save $5 billion or more. Most often mentioned are military construction in the U.S., the supersonic transport project, the space program, research and development in all fields (which now amounts to $17 billion), and such frills as highway beautification. Last week Wisconsin's John Byrnes, senior Republican on Ways and Means, got a call from the Interior Department informing him of a $2,000 grant for picnic facilities...
...said additional spaces would have to be assigned elsewhere to the faculty, but that there would still be adequate parking space for both students and faculty in the lots behind the Business School, despite the new building...
Dean Watson said in a recent interview that the College wants to encourage students to move off-campus. This is surely a welcome decision, for by the wonderous process of laissez-faire it will permit those students to leave the Houses who have wanted to do so and provide space for those denied entry because of crowding. It might also give the College an opportunity to deconvert over-full quarters...
...problems of administration are many and formidable. They range from management and organizational questions involved in the proper utilization of appropriations, personnel, space and statistics to such serious and intricate questions as jurisdiction, judicial selection and disability, jury selection and management, calendar control, rule making and geographical organization of the courts. Apart from these varied problems, yet part of each of them, is the planning function of court administration. Such administration involves meeting not only the problems of the hour but anticipating the needs of the future and reassuring that our system of justice is geared to cope with...
Today, our courts face the heaviest caseloads in our history. Backlogs continue to mount and the time space between the commencement of action and the termination of the case continues to rise. For the ninth consecutive year the number of appeals on the dockets of our courts of appeals in the federal system has increased. Ten per cent more cases were filed in these courts in fiscal 1967 than in 1966. Since 1960 the number of appeals in these courts has more than double. Cases in the federal district courts are increasing every year. Bankruptcy cases have now gone over...