Word: censuses
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...verbally under the protection of free speech. The change of law in 1966 meant to the welfare department that medical bills from contraceptive consultation and prescription could be processed unless the woman was unmarried, divorced or widowed. The treatment of cases is not uniform; through interviewing I did in Census Tract 15, I found one woman whose enlightened social worker has initiated conversation with her on birth control and arranged for these bills to be processed even though the woman was unmarried. Two blocks away, there was a very young Negro girl with two illegitimate children who asserted her social...
...industry has pushed hard to learn as much as possible about its fourlegged customers and their masters. Attempts to persuade the Census Bureau to include the pet population in its statistics have so far failed, but by industry estimates the U.S. has 25 million dogs, 20 million cats and 30 million pet-owning families. Surveys reveal that a family owning a dog or cat has an income of $8,000 or more and is itself consuming increasing amounts of prepared food-which means fewer scraps to feed pet appetites...
REPLYING for the government, Wall scoffed at the defense's insistence on knowing who the co-conspirators were and which men had been enticed into breaking the law. "All Mr. Boudin has to do is go to the Bureau of the Census and ask for the name of every male person between 18 and 35 and he'll know who's been counselled," Wall said...
...reply to a request by Leonard Boudin, Spock's attorney, for more particulars, assistant U.S. attorney John Wall told the court: "All Mr. Boudin has to do is go to the Bureau of the Census and ask for the name of every male person between 18 and 35, and he'll know who's been counselled" to break Selective Service laws...
...Martha Eliot Health Center serves an area of four and a half census districts--that is, about 17,000 people in Jamaica Plain and a small part of Roxbury. Because restricted funding has limited care to mothers and children under 21, only approximately 8000 residents are potential patients. The Bromley-Heath housing project, where the center is located, is nearly all Negro, with a smattering of Cubans and Puerto Ricans. The dilapidated homes around the project belong to Negroes, Cubans, Puerto Ricans, Greeks, and some old Boston Irish-Catholics. Many of these old Irish families are unwilling to come...