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Word: unpaid (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...tickets and exceed their informal quotas (based on anticipated crime) in making "field interrogations" and misdemeanor arrests. Civil rights leaders argue that police sometimes overexercise their discretionary powers by hitting minority groups for marginal offenses. In slum areas, critics claim, such zeal is often self-defeating: for the poor, unpaid traffic tickets and minor arrests lead to more arrests, lost jobs-and more crime in order to pay the bills...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Police: An Optimist for Los Angeles | 2/17/1967 | See Source »

This generated quite a dilemma for those faculty members, like Shenton, who want to give grades, but who do not want to be made "involuntary, unpaid employees" of the Armed Forces draft boards. Shenton then decided to counter with an alternative plan. In the two days before the meeting, he discussed his problem with Hovde, and together they drew up their no-rank resolution...

Author: By Joel R. Kramer, | Title: Getting Faculty to Confront the Draft Depends on Discovering the Right Angle | 2/9/1967 | See Source »

...findings of a state senate committee investigating the activities of Volpe's Commissioner of Administration and Finance, John J. McCarthy. McCarthy revealed to the committee that Gov. Volpe's brother, S. Peter Volpe, who is also the vice-president of the John A. Volpe Construction Company, had been an unpaid consultant regarding the selection of architects for state contracts. And a South Shore architect told the committee that he had given Peter Volpe a $1000 check for a Gov. Volpe testimonial dinner...

Author: By Paul J. Corkery, | Title: Longer Terms to Alter Massachusetts Politics | 11/7/1966 | See Source »

...died shortly after her trial; her father and mother, 89 and 84, were living in retirement-Burnice had broken the bank. As for her capital gains, wherever they were, both federal and state governments were still waiting for Burnice's release to claim at least $900,000 in unpaid taxes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime: Burnice Comes Home | 7/8/1966 | See Source »

Denied. Coleman, 55, an unpaid, part-time "special deputy," was indicted by a county grand jury for manslaughter, defined in Alabama as killing "intentionally but without malice." State Attorney General Richmond Flowers took over the prosecution, announced that he would seek a new indictment for murder. Last week, before Circuit Judge T. Werth Thagard, Flowers requested a postponement of the manslaughter trial. His main argument: the state's key witness, Morrisroe, was still hospitalized and too ill to testify. Thagard denied a postponement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Trials: A License to Kill | 10/8/1965 | See Source »

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