Word: officerã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Chaney is not showing the movie for comic relief. The day’s lesson is the operations order, a key component of an officer??s duties, which, according to Chaney, Leonidas does not have quite right.And for the cadets of the Paul Revere battalion—a division of the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) that includes students from Harvard, Tufts, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology—getting it right is serious business. These students must master the kind of discipline necessary to lead soldiers—some many years their senior?...
...Officers observed two individuals in a verbal argument at Pforzheimer House. One of the individuals claimed he wanted an entry fee returned. Officers told the individual that entry fees were not refundable; the individual became angry and raised his or her arms and began yelling. The individual grabbed an officer??s arm and continued yelling. The officers instructed the individual to cease yelling; the individual complied, apologized, and was sent...
...While en route to a call, officers observed an individual in the street screaming and waving their arms in an aggressive manner near the kiosk at 1400 Mass. Ave. The individual then stood in front of the officer??s vehicle and began to pound on the window and attempted to open the vehicle door. Officers exited the vehicle and the individual continued to yell in a confrontational manner. Christopher M. Meara, 36, was then placed under arrest...
...during his third hearing at the Cambridge District Court. Christopher “Kai” Wu ’09 is charged with two counts of “assault and battery,” and two counts of “assault and battery on a police officer?? for pushing his girlfriend and hitting an officer at the Tri-House winter formal on Dec. 16. Wu is also charged with “malicious destruction of property” for breaking the window of a police cruiser upon arrival at Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) headquarters...
...private security firm with no police authority should have to release its internal records to the public, HUPD—like any other deputized campus police department—represents a patently different case. The distinction in this matter should not, as Harvard maintains, rest on who signs an officer??s paycheck, or to whom an officer answers, or which insignia an officer wears on his sleeve. Rather, it should rest on which powers are delegated by the state and applied by the agency, since this is the only distinction that materially affects the general public...