Word: arresters
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Earlier this week, Gorski said he is planning to institute a radical change in the police force next semester--Harvard police will be expected to arrest trespassers in University buildings...
Gorski sees this new arrest policy--which has the support of the University committee on crime, chaired by Stephen S.J. Hall, vice-president for administration--as a means of significantly reducing the property theft rate at Harvard. Hall said Wednesday that $3000 to $4000 worth of property is stolen each week...
Outsiders who have followed the case are similarly divided. Doctors acknowledge that they occasionally practice "judicious neglect," deciding, for example, against reviving a terminal cancer patient who has just gone into cardiac arrest or performing corrective surgery on a hopelessly retarded infant with a serious heart condition as well. Indeed, many doctors admit that the withholding of extraordinary medical care is a not uncommon practice at both ends of the life spectrum. Dr. Raymond Duff, for instance, revealed in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1974 that of 299 infants who died over a 2½-year period...
...doctors' growing concern over malpractice suits, which have increased significantly during the past decade. Says Dr. Laurens White of San Francisco: "Karen's luck ran out when the doctor put her on the respirator...Maybe, if she's lucky, she'll have a cardiac arrest...
Monday, November 17--Vowing to take no chances, Yale President Kingman Brewster declares, "The curse will not strike in New Haven," and places quarterback Stone Phillips under house arrest. "He's better protected than Bobby Seale," Brewster brags to his friends...