Word: redressing
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...hardly been a dynamic campaigner. All in all, according to De Gaulle's calculations, a shift of 10,000 votes in the right places would have turned 35 Gaullist losers into winners. "That's not seri- ous," he told his Cabinet. "It is a situation that will redress itself...
...private grief, personal thoughts and painful reactions which my children and I endured in those terrible days does not seem to me to be essential to any current historical record." Jackie's statement concluded: "As horrible as a trial will be, it now seems clear that my only redress is to ask the courts to enforce my rights and postpone publication until the minimum limits of my family's privacy can be protected...
...freed another man who had been jailed for exactly the same offense, simply because the state failed to tell him that he had a right to a lawyer. Said Stewart: "When the meaning of a fundamental constitutional right depends on which court in Connecticut a person turns to for redress, I believe it is time for this court to intervene...
Civil rights demonstrators have frequently invoked an American tradition that is as old as the country itself: the First Amendment "right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." Harried police have often invoked something else: the power of every state to preserve the public peace and protect property rights. The conflict has faced the Supreme Court with a dilemma: When does state police power take precedence over the First Amendment's protections for peaceful demonstrators...
...Cambridge Board of Zoning Appeal, the Cambridge Planning Board, the Massachusetts Legislature, the Governor of Massachusetts, and Judge Traveira of the Superior Court of Massachusetts. It would seem logical that Mr. Morrill look to his architect and lawyer rather than a Church Street Trustee for blame and redress. Sheldon Dietz Trustee, Church Street Trust