Word: counseling
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Cambridge police court. Many another famed son of Harvard was there with him. Blood and eggs had stained Harvard Square in the largest town-and-gown outbreak of recent years (TIME, Feb. 21). Thirty-three students and six "townies" were on trial for disturbing the peace. Distinguished counsel argued counter-charges against the Cambridge police, who had, complained the riotous students, been unnecessarily brutal with their nightsticks. Nothing more serious than fines and reprimands promised to result from the hearings, but the testimony was not without its highlights...
Distinguished counsel and Judge Arthur P. Stone could not refrain from smiling, now and then, at the testimony. After a while, President Lowell, leaving subordinates to represent the university, returned to his duties...
...priest authorized to give absolution.* He added: "Psychoanalysis has shown the modern mind the therapeutic value of confessing one's faults unreservedly. But it has been abused, and confession alone is not enough, in our opinion. Catholics think the confessional brings more than relief, advice and counsel." Dr. Fosdick's confessional is by no means unique among Protestant ministers. Every preacher who has listened to the confidences of his congregation has heard confessions. But few ministers have cared, or dared, to use the Roman Catholic Church term. Of the few are Methodist Bishop Francis J. McConnell of Pittsburgh...
...Schlesinger on her Wyoming ranch. She, Eleanor, granddaughter of Tribune-founder Joseph Medill, married first one Count Gizycki. Her present husband was onetime general counsel of the U. S. Shipping Board and is now a member of Chadbourne, Stanchfield & Levy, Manhattan corporation lawyers. She recently wrote a book, Glass Houses, about Washington Society and Senators ("Red Hot Togas," said critics...
...blood? Both are good for the circulation ! . . . Oh, for the peanut venders . . . that used to enliven our funeral mobs. Anything to jazz up those curiously apathetic groups that huddled on the Westchester Court House steps. . . . Like subway crowds they waited, patient and dull. . . ." World subtitles: "One-Ounce Fag Lifts Counsel's Eyebrow," "Testimony is as Full of Beds as a Barracks...