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Word: suppressions (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...suspect cannot suppress evidence just because a search warrant is not served on him personally. Armed with a valid warrant, Nashville detectives set out to search Joseph M. Calvert's house for some stolen rare coins. Calvert was not at home, so the detectives simply walked in, found some incriminating coins and left a copy of the warrant. Refusing to bar the evidence, the Tennessee Supreme Court ruled that police did not need to actually present a warrant to the subject of their search. In general, police may forcibly enter a house to execute a valid warrant after announcing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Decisions: Who Can't Have What | 12/16/1966 | See Source »

Emphatic Rejection. Black's theory appalled his longtime libertarian colleague, Justice William O. Douglas, who spoke for three other dissenters (Warren, Brennan, Fortas) in blasting the court for inviting the use of trespass laws as "a blunderbuss to suppress civil rights." Not only was trespass being wrongfully applied to public property, argued Douglas, but custodians of such property were being given "awesome power to decide whose ideas may be expressed." Douglas called the decision "a wonderful police-state doctrine" that will "only increase the forces of frustration which the conditions of secondclass citizenship are generating amongst...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Supreme Court: The Test That Wasn't a Test | 11/25/1966 | See Source »

...even his son could add much to the animated image of the great man. Yet Randolph's biography succeeds. It is not just another item in the hefty shelf of Churchill memorabilia, and it is more than a son's pious exercise. Randolph, 55, is able to suppress his own rather gaudy personality, intrudes into the narrative only once or twice, and then only with the purpose of contrasting the generous treatment he received at the hands of his father with the harsh and demanding rule that Lord Randolph imposed upon the boy Winston. This...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Like a Delinquent Dunderhead | 11/11/1966 | See Source »

With its wild notions of what constitutes evidence, Edwards' book compounds one mystery by creating others. Nor does it help his case for an imminent apocalypse to explain flaws in the brief by making the U.S. Air Force the villain of a conspiracy to suppress the truth; he believes that the Pentagon's reassuring statements about UFOs are designed to hoodwink the public into supposing that they are psychological, meteoric, or astral in origin. Nor is sinister Air Force activity confined to the U.S. "What," he asks, "was the mysterious substance that dribbled from a crippled disk over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Heavenly Bogeys | 9/2/1966 | See Source »

...resistant to sulfadiazine and 21% to tetracycline; at Children's Hospital Medical Center in Boston, no fewer than 65% of the E. coli and 92% of Proteus vulgaris resisted at least one important drug. Equally sobering, researchers note that antibiotics are now routinely put in livestock feed to suppress bacteria and stimulate the animals' growth. This procedure may well produce animal bacteria that transmit drug resistance to bacteria that infect humans; indeed, such new strains may be resistant to all penicillins and tetracyclines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bacteria: How Germs Learn to Live | 8/26/1966 | See Source »

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