Word: taunton
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...Alex Goldstein Jr. of Northport, Me.; Peter C. Harpel of Bangor, Me.; David G. McLean of Watertown, N. Y.; Henry J. Moore of Gloucester, Mass.; William F. Morris of Rochester, N. Y.; Richard C. Norris of Schenoctady, N. Y.; James K. Polese of Belmont, Mass.; Michael S. Robertson of Taunton, Mass.; Lauren D. Studebaker of Bellevue, Wash.; Alexander Z. Warren of Concord, N. H.; Richard G. Wharton (Capt.) of Boston, Mass.; Philip M. Williams of Newton, Mass.; David L. Wishart of Portland, Ore.; Robert Piza Weil Jr. of Stamford, Conn...
Last week British obstinacy won a surprising victory over Continental superiority. After a two-day stay at the 300-year-old Castle Hotel in Taunton, a visiting chevalier of the Cercle Gastronomique de Belgique went home to Belgium and talked his fellow epicures into awarding the English hotel its Grand Prix for the year. He was eloquent in praise of the roast duckling, the apple tart, the port-touched Stilton. Castle Chef Charles Instep accepted the prize (a silver cup, 18 inches high) for himself and England with becoming modesty. "We can't always please 100% of our customers...
...Center for Field Studies is a non-profit unit which carries out studies on all aspects of education. It has already done surveys of the systems in Taunton, Waltham, Ipswich, Pittsfield, Dalton, Southbore, and Gloucester...
...first major stop was Taunton where Stevenson, again straining the no speech on Sunday theme, spoke briefly about the need for more local responsibility by the state and cited the new mental institution there, the cause of the visit, as an example of this. Throughout the talk, an airplane trailing a "Vote for Stevenson" sign circled overhead, and Stevenson noted that he had nothing to do "with that irritating airplane" which, he feared, was giving the dedication a political hint. Governor Dever merely smiled...
...Price Paid. None of the reporting doctors was more concerned with the side effects of psychosurgery than Dr. Edward K. Wilk of Taunton, Mass. "Personality blunting," he says, "has been the inevitable price paid for a complete lobotomy operation [and] reveals itself in the higher realms of creative imagination, foresight, ambition and social sensitivity." Some long-confined schizophrenics are so tar gone that this damage might hardly show. But the less severe the case, the greater the risk. And if psychosurgery is to be used in other psychoses, and even in neuroses, says Dr. Wilk, personality damage cannot be tolerated...