Word: tate
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...kaftans and give the visuals another chance. "Summer of Love: Art of the Psychedelic Era" runs at the Kunsthalle Schirn in Frankfurt from Nov. 2 to Feb. 12, and then at Vienna's Kunsthalle Wien from May 5 to Sept. 3. The original organizers (it started life at Tate Liverpool in England) say it's time to rediscover "this forgotten and repressed aesthetic." It's already happening: bizarre flower prints are back in style, and '60s furniture is highly collectible...
...kaftans and give the visuals another chance. "Summer of Love: Art of the Psychedelic Era" runs at the Kunsthalle Schirn in Frankfurt from Nov. 2 to Feb. 12, and then at Vienna's Kunsthalle Wien from May 5 to Sept. 3. The original organizers (it started life at Tate Liverpool in England) say it's time to rediscover "this forgotten and repressed aesthetic." It's already happening: bizarre flower prints are back in style, and '60s furniture is highly collectible. The show, with art from the U.S., Europe and Japan, assaults most of the senses with concert posters, films, photographs...
...principles over which Miller said she went to jail was her belief that the so-called blanket waivers of confidentiality signed by Libby and several other White House officials were coerced from them, leaving her no choice other than to continue protecting them. But Libby's lawyer Joseph Tate suggested that Libby had offered Miller a freely given waiver as much as a year ago and that her lawyers dropped the ball--either they didn't understand the offer or they failed to communicate it to Miller. In a letter that Libby wrote to Miller after the negotiations resumed last...
Miller had spent nearly two months in jail on civil contempt-of-court charges when negotiations between the two camps resumed. Another Miller lawyer, Robert Bennett, picked up the phone on Aug. 31 to call Tate. Bennett told TIME that the Miller camp had received an indication from a third party that it might be a good time to approach Libby with a new request to personally waive the confidentiality agreement. It took Miller's lawyers a month, till Sept. 29, to hammer out the details with Libby and Fitzgerald. A legal source told TIME that Fitzgerald gave both camps...
...made with Libby and Fitzgerald that led to Cooper's testimony in August 2004, after Fitzgerald indicated he was interested only in Cooper's conversations with Libby. Cooper called Libby himself to ask for a waiver; Libby asked Cooper to have his lawyer, who happened to be Abrams, call Tate to work out the details. Two other journalists, Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post and Tim Russert of NBC News, also gave testimony on their conversations with Libby...