Word: arresters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...issue has been raging in the nation's courts for the last ten years, but only recently have politicians been speaking to voters about it. The real dispute, of course, is not about crime--everyone is against that--but about what police should do with the persons they detain, arrest, and question. Recent Supreme Court rulings have tended to extend the rights of individuals in police custody. Buckley thinks that these rulings have tied the policeman's hands, and he wants to unleash the police on anyone who might be a criminal...
...expected almost any day. In the small hours of the morning, police and army units will close off the crowded African suburbs surrounding the capital of Salisbury, a state of preventive emergency will be declared, and Britain's Governor, Sir Humphrey Gibbs, will be placed under house arrest. What follows--in a land where black Africans outnumber whites 18 to one--could be disastrous, not only for Rhodesia, but for all of Africa and the West...
Wounded Daughter. Untung's good luck began to run out early. As his men rounded up the suspect generals, Army Chief of Staff Ahmad Yani and a quartermaster corps general were said to have been killed. The detachment sent to arrest Defense Minister Abdul Haris Nasution bungled the job: Nasution and his five-year-old daughter were reportedly both wounded...
...case was later dismissed because the students had not been allowed by the Cambridge police to make a telephone call within an hour after the arrest, a requirement of Massachusetts...
...night watchmen cannot deal with prowlers themselves, but must call the Cambridge Police to arrest them. A Cambridge patrolman has always been stationed at Radcliffe...