Word: counsels
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...stump, Indiana's Birch Bayh is plagued by anti-abortion demonstrators who decry his leadership last year in the Senate against a constitutional amendment that would have outlawed most abortions. Sargent Shriver does not favor overturning the Supreme Court decision, but proposes setting up "life-support" centers to counsel women seeking abortions on whether or not to really have the operation. Ellen McCormack, 49, a housewife from Merrick, N.Y., is running hard in the Democratic primary in the state-as well as in Massachusetts-representing the anti-abortion Right to Life movement. Her support is broad enough nationally that...
Daniel Steiner '54, general counsel for the University, who devised the plan to open up the awards, said he had hoped to include fellowships such as the Shaw--which is limited specifically to "young men"--by broadly construing the term "men." But yesterday Steiner said that he had not been able to find "any good case support...
...ordered the students to leave South House at the worst possible moment for those involved. Moreever, the decision was based on a right the University should not have, the ability to order student tenants evicted on as little as one minute's notice, according to Harvard's deputy general counsel. This feature of room contracts denies students a routine privilege extended to normal tenants: the right of adequate notice in the case of eviction...
James A. Sharaf '60, attorney in the office of the general counsel, said yesterday that the corporation decision would not have any effect other than the opening up of most fellowships and prizes...
...then, and a bit of a bon vivant, dashing in tweeds, with wavy hair and eyes as soulful as a bandleader's. Kluger also provides a contrapuntal portrait of John W. Davis, who ran for the Democrats against Calvin Coolidge in 1924. A brilliant lawyer who served as counsel to Eugene Debs, Alger Hiss and Robert Oppenheimer, Davis was also what Kluger calls a "gentleman racist." At 80, wearing a cutaway, he appeared before the Supreme Court defending segregation by ingenious psychological and legal arguments...