Word: personals
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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CLAO will prepare for the group of agencies interested in this problem a summary of the relevant statutes and will help work out with all interested parties, including agencies, judges, and senior citizen groups, suitable procedures for anyone to follow who comes into contact with an elderly person who is unable to care for himself or may be dangerous to others. The group of participants will thoroughly discuss and articulate in writing the criteria, including specific situations, when involuntary admission for temporary observation should and should not be permitted. I trust that the procedure will include immediate legal representation...
First, considering that he was writing a copyrighted article, he might have checked the spelling of the name of a person he intended to castigate. He would have found that "Tom Galleway" is actually Tim Gallwey. Then, having discovered in the Alumni Directory that William T. Gallwey is Harvard '60, he might have glanced in the year book for that class and seen such entries as: PBH, Varsity Squash, Varsity Tennis (Captain), Hasty Pudding. Probably not much more could be gleaned from the public records, but any of this at least would have rescued Tim Gallwey from being characterized...
...Myers Briggs Test provides data which can be interpreted as measures of cognitive style, particularly of the kind of perceptual process by which a person interprets sense impressions. The psychiatric group was more inclined to use that perceptive process which depends less on direct perception through the ordinary senses and more on the unconscious meanings attached to direct sense impressions. To put it another way, the students who sought psychiatric help were more intuitive and introspective...
There is a federal criminal law (Section 242, Title 18, U.S. Code) that carries a one-year sentence for public officials who willfully deny a person's constitutional rights. But no one has ever invoked it against prosecutors. There is a federal civil law (Section 1983, Title 42) that permits money damages for the same injury. Yet as elected officials and court officers, prosecutors are presumably immune to such civil suits. Not in living memory has any American prosecutor ever been punished in any way for falsifying or misrepresenting evidence...
...person with coverage from outside sources, O'Connell testified, would thus be rewarded with reduced premiums, as his economic losses would not have to be paid totally by the insurance company. Similarly, a student earning no wages has small potential economic loss and would pay lower premiums...