Word: counseling
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...taken into custody dropped 27%, to 12,965, from 1992 to 1994. Of those guns, 6,261 were handguns, or about three for each of the bureau's 2,000 agents. An ATF spokesman says such fluctuations are meaningless, but Kay Kubicki, a former ATF agent who is now counsel for the National Association of Treasury Agents, disagrees. "The only reason the total of guns [seized] would go down is morale," she says. "There's a direct correlation between the turmoil in the agency and the decline...
...reports that Senate Republicans will begin a new round of Whitewater hearings Tuesday by hammering at apparent inconsistencies in accounts of the removal of files by White House personnel from the office of top Clinton aide Vincent Foster immediately after his death in 1993. That night, then-White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum, Hillary Rodham Clinton's chief of staff Margaret Williams and aide Patsy Thomasson were in Foster's office, reportedly searching for a suicide note. They say they removed nothing. But Secret Service guard Henry O'Neill has told Senate investigators that he saw Ms. Williams leaving Foster...
Throughout his life, Price held numerousgovernment positions, including counsel to theExecutive Office of the President from 1961 to1972 and adviser to the King of Nepal in 1960. Healso served as a trustee at the Rand Corporationfrom 1961 to 1971 and at the Twentieth CenturyFund from 1965 until his death...
...included Fred L. Glimp '50, vice president for development and alumni affairs, with $246,463; N. Sally Zeckhauser, vice president for administration, with $241,597; Leverett Professor of Interfaculty Teaching and Research Jerry R. Green, who was then provost, with $236,092; and Vice President and General Counsel Margaret H. Marshall with...
Civil libertarians were outraged. Mike Godwin, staff counsel for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, complained that the indecency portion of the bill would transform the vast library of the Internet into a children's reading room, where only subjects suitable for kids could be discussed. "It's government censorship," said Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. "The First Amendment shouldn't end where the Internet begins...