Word: morton
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...hearing before John Morton Blum '43 and Hugh Calkins '43. Fellows of the Corporation, begins at 9 a.m. and will continue until oral testimony is completed. If the afternoon session, which begins at 2 p.m., extends beyond an 8 p.m. deadline, the hearing will resume Saturday morning...
...constitutional stewardship--will hold the President to the appropriate standards in considering confirmation. Derrick A. Bell, Jr. Gary Bellow Harold J. Berman Abram Chayes Morris L. Cohen Vern Countryman Jerome P. Facher Richard H. Field William B. Gould Charles M. Haar Livingston Hall David R. Herwitz Phillip B. Heymann Morton J. Horwitz Benjamin Kaplan Lance Liebman Louis Loss Karen S. Metzger Frank I. Michelman Arthur R. Miller Charles R. Nesson Albert M. Sacks Frank E.A. Sander Austin W. Scott Henry J. Steiner John P. Sullivan Stanley S. Surrey Donald T. Trautman Laurence H. Tribe Donald F. Turner James Vorenberg Robert...
...Corporation halfheartedly discussed the Gulf Angola Project resolutions, which opposed Gulf Oil's involvement in Angola and other Portuguese colonies in Africa. The debate was limited, Hugh Calkins '43 Fellow of the Corporation, said, because the Fellows "weren't sure what Mr. Bennett had already done." Agreeing, John Morton Blum '43, Fellow of the Corporation, said afterwards, "It was a ship that passed in the night...
Official Anger. Vogan's disclosures provoked a storm of official anger in the capital. Secretary of the Interior Rogers C.B. Morton proclaimed the shootings a "national outrage," and his department promised to prosecute the hunters. Agents dispatched to Wyoming by Senator Gale McGee, before whose committee Vogan testified, had also found evidence of "substantial, willful and deliberate slaughtering of eagles." Last week McGee's men found proof: a cache of about 60 eagles, badly decomposed and buried six feet deep under the remains of other animals...
...They anticipated by years the Government's change of heart-and encouraged it at least indirectly. Through articles, speeches and personal contacts, they have helped alter the official view of a decade ago, which saw Chinese communism as ruthlessly totalitarian at home and implacably expansionist abroad. According to Morton Halperin at the Brookings Institution, the scholars who have consulted with the Government's China watchers have become nearly unanimous in depicting China as a relatively defensive, inward-looking, less-than-bellicose land. Says Halperin: "There was an enormous change from the time McNamara and Rusk were quoting...