Word: legalizes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Some 300 men, mostly Harvard freshmen, were turned away from that first dance because the legal capacity for the Union (1000 students) had been surpassed. Unwanted teenagers had worked their way through the back windows, through the fire escape leading to the television room, and by some methods which still remain a mystery...
Dean Watson said tonight that the group was "absolutely phony." Harvard will institute legal action against its authors as soon as they are apprehended, he said...
Then Maurine began to lose interest in Capitol Hill. After marrying Dr. Philip Solomon, a Boston psychiatrist, in July 1964, she set up house in Newton Centre, Mass, (though maintaining a legal residence in Oregon). She spent more and more time in the East, paid less and less attention to her constituents, turned down many speaking engagements, and in the past two years, all but stopped visiting Oregon...
...theory, the adversary system on which U.S. trials are built is a legal contest with one overriding purpose: to discover the truth. In fact, outside pressures often change the courtroom controversy into a lawyers' scramble for headlines. And when that happens, the search for truth may be sadly neglected. This is the disturbing conclusion of The Trial of Jack Ruby (Macmillan; $7.95), by Professors John Kaplan and Jon R. Waltz of Stanford and North western universities, a deft and read able analysis that depicts a legal disaster-a world-watched trial in which the defendant drew the ultimate sentence...
...defecting ships cut their lines at night and drifted away; loyalist cells formed in the mutinous crews, and there were bloody fights aboard. By lune, the great mutiny was over, a victim of its own irresolution. The Admiralty briskly hanged Parker and 35 other mutineers with a minimum of legal niceties and got back to the wars...