Word: arresters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Bruce's conviction grew out of an arrest for delivering a scatological monologue at the Café Au Go Go, a Greenwich Village coffeehouse. In the criminal trial, Judges John M. Murtagh and J. Randall Creel said that Bruce had "clearly debased sex and insulted it," in addition to using basic English synonyms for incest, sodomy and excrement. Thus, they ruled, Bruce had exceeded all three of the U.S. Supreme Court guidelines that currently determine legal obscenity. These guidelines state that material is obscene if it appeals dominantly to prurient interest, breaches contemporary standards relating to the description...
Grounds for Contempt. The main intent was to curb out-of-court talking by judges, court employees, prosecutors, defense lawyers and police from the time of arrest to trial's end. During that period, they would be permitted to give newsmen the defendant's name, the nour and place of arrest, information about whether the defendant resisted or was armed at the time of arrest, a description of any physical evidence seized, and the nature of the charge. The jurists and cops would be specifically barred from revealing any previous record, the results of fingerprinting and lie detector...
...each other, began living together on and off in Paris and Cuba. When Réis left Cuba and went on to tie up with the guerrillas in Bolivia last year, Elizabeth stayed behind on the island, then flew to Paris after Debray's arrest and helped organize the Defense for Réis Debray Committee...
From 1960 until his arrest by the KGB in 1962, Colonel Oleg Penkovsky of Soviet military intelligence funneled out to the West a steady stream of Moscow's most vital secrets. His side of the story was recounted in The Penkovsky Papers, published in 1965. Contact on Gorky Street is the autobiographical account of the British businessman, recruited by British intelligence, who befriended Penkovsky in Moscow and became his conduit to the West. The book is far more chilling than any of the fictional adventures of James Bond or Harry Palmer...
Stephen Lerner's record of a night in jail, arrested for selling Avatar, is a model of the tone the paper's writers usually miss. However, by over-working the February 5 mass arrest on the six preceding pages--because of editorial lack of coordination--the effect of this fine piece is blunted...