Word: counseled
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination (Malloy v. Hogan in 1964) and the Sixth Amendment's right to counsel (Gideon v. Wainwright in 1963). To be sure, the court said flatly in 1904: "The Sixth Amendment does not apply to proceedings in state criminal courts." But in the light of Gideon, Malloy and other "absorption" cases, ruled Black, statements "generally declaring that the Sixth Amendment does not apply to states can no longer be regarded as law." After reversing Pointer's conviction on these grounds, the court emphasized its new doctrine by doing exactly the same...
Moot's fears counsel caution, and chairman of Cambridge's "Citizens' Committee on Implementation of the Economic Opportunity Act," that's what he has given the City...
...applaud the President's high purpose and sympathize with his anger, but I deplore his mentioning in a news conference the names of the four suspects in the Alabama murder of Mrs. Liuzzo [April 2]. The right of the accused to their own day in court, represented by counsel, is at least as important as the right to assemble and petition or the right to vote. Legal guilt must be proved in a courtroom, not announced from a speaker's platform...
...authors of the report--Dustin M. Burke '52, general manager of the HSA, Charles H. Everill '65, and Harold Rosenwald '27, HSA general counsel--apologized for the length of the report, but felt that a sunperilcial treatment of the matter can serve the interests of none...
...snowy-haired, courtly Virginian, Fowler was born in Roanoke, the son of a locomotive engineer. He graduated from Yale Law School, served as a New Deal-era counsel for the Tennessee Valley Authority and the Federal Power Commission. In the 1940s he was a lawyer for the War Production Board; during the Korean War he rose to director of the Office of Defense Mobilization...