Word: unclearly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...needs some sort of screening procedure to weed out frivolous cases from those which merit hearings. Of the 19 cases just concluded, 10 resulted in acquittal: many would have been laughed out of any court in the country. Charges were brought with no evidence, on the basis of motives unclear at best and political at worst. All those charged were obliged to spend upwards of twenty hours preparing refutation; finding witnesses; reviewing films; obtaining letters; meeting with counsel. Were the CRR to review beforehand the basis of each complaint, such wasted time (both on the part of the student erroneously...
According to Barghoorn, most researchers agree that amino acids are probably absent but that the story of porphyrins is still very unclear...
...introductory remarks, Anderson said, "There's potential dual overlap with the Administrative Board. It's a little unclear where a situation like this belongs. But no new complaints can be filed on the basis of what's brought forth during this hearing...
...entering office, Kissinger abandoned the idea of negotiating a "decent interval" with the North Vietnamese. Many factors could have contributed to his change of position: the North Vietnamese may have met such a suggestion with skepticism and distrust; and it was unclear that Nixon had ever approved of the interval idea at all, that he was willing to sacrifice the Saigon regime in talks with Hanoi. In any event, the decent interval was transformed into what was known in White House jargon as "firebreak"; the United States would leave Vietnam in a show of military force, and only after Saigon...
Because Kissinger's conversations with Nixon are secret, it is unclear precisely what role he played in the decision to invade Cambodia. It seems evident, however, that he recommended some form of escalation-such as the bombing of North Vietnam-and it is well-known that he supported the decision that Nixon finally made. And it is certain that the action was perfectly consonant withKissinger's notions of the use and threat of force...