Word: warded
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...courtroom face-off with Psychiatrist and Cosmopolitan Columnist Renatus Hartogs, 66, who, she claimed, had mixed professional advice with sexual advances (TIME, March 24). Sexual intercourse with the good doctor, claimed Roy, had only produced severe depression and two involuntary stretches in a New York psychiatric ward. Last week a six-member jury awarded the $65-a-week clerk $250,000 in compensatory damages and another $100,000 in punitive damages. Hartogs, meanwhile, was left to ponder the possible loss of his medical license and the prospect of a similar suit by another of his former patients...
Assigned to a ward that was designed for 40 patients but is sometimes crowded with 50 or more, Condon reported for duty at 8 a.m. He immediately began taking blood samples from patients, then at 9 a.m. broke off to accompany a resident as he stopped at patients' bedsides. At 11:30 he wolfed down a sandwich and spent the rest of his lunch hour in the library reviewing patients' records to prepare himself for teaching rounds, when he would tour the ward with an attending physician. From 4 p.m., when the tour ended, until dinnertime, Condon continued...
Steve Saxon, Joe Whatley and Mike Jemison each scored one try to propel the B team to an easy 12-0 victory over the Columbia B squad. "We simply outclassed said outgunned them," wing Kevin Ward said yesterday...
...backs were the real standouts Saturday, as the fine passing and well-balanced attack of Saxon, L. Whatley, Jemison, Ward and Joel McCafery led to three easy scores...
...more sign of the shallowness of Harvard's commitment to a diverse community open to all segments of society. As Leonard says in the report. "Not only have we not progressed a great deal since October 1971 (both statistically and attitudinally), but I fear we have moved back-ward from that date." It took three years for the University to work out an affirmative action program that met the legal requirements for the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The changes called for by this plan are minuscule at best and make Harvard's failure to reach its goals even...