Word: colorado
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Groves said only one school, Colorado State College in Greeley, quit the NSA as a result of the disclosure of the CIA tie. Brandeis University suspended its membership for a year...
...even these theories do not wholly explain all UFO sightings. At Colorado, Physicist Condon and his staff have investigated new reports, sifted through past Blue Book and NICAP files, and begun a computer-aided analysis of 2,000 sightings. For the moment, Condon has narrowed the study down to three sightings supported by ample photographic or eyewitness evidence. The first was made in daylight at Mc-Minnville, Ore., on May 11, 1950 by Paul Trent, a farmer who spotted and photographed a saucer 20 ft. to 30 ft. in diameter hovering over his field. Trent's saucer, which resembled...
...Minute Hearings. Juvenile folklore is only part of the instruction at the four-week summer college that winds up this week at the University of Colorado. Conducted by the National Council of Juvenile Court Judges, the school is designed to help the jurists learn criminal-law procedure and adjust to the Supreme Court's recent decision In the Matter of Gault, which gives juveniles many of the same constitutional safeguards that adults enjoy. Because of the decision and recommendations by the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, juveniles are emerging from legal limbo...
...flaws, the juvenile-court system has developed some outstanding judges. Colorado's Ben B. Lindsey, the famous advocate of "companionate marriage" who died in 1943, spent four decades introducing numerous reforms, such as a Colorado law forbidding the charging of children under 16 with crime. Juvenile Judge Orman W. Ketcham, of Washington, D.C., a faculty member of the current summer college, has campaigned for years for stronger legal safeguards for children. Justine Wise Polier, for 32 years a justice in New York's family courts, has written books advocating a more compassionate approach to juvenile problems...
...Colorado summer college, Denver Judge Ted Rubin, conceded that some of the necessary changes will cost money and irritate police as well as judges. But on the whole, he predicted, the gains will outweigh the disadvantages. "The present system, which shuns the adversary system and prefers flexible and informal deliberations, denies consistent legal protection to the child. As a result, the child does not understand himself or the system. By incorporation of constitutional safeguards into this system, individualized justice can become a reality...