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  2. Provide feedback for AOL.com - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/provide-feedback-for-aol-com

    If you experience anything like this, please report the comments to us or submit feedback. If someone’s posting or spamming comments that contain racial slurs, vulgarity or anything inappropriate, please use the report feature that’s available in the comment system. To report a comment: 1. Go to the comment you are reporting. 2.

  3. Talk:False Memory Syndrome Foundation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:False_Memory_Syndrome...

    Columbia Journalism Review July/August 1997 Mike Stanton "Pamela Freyd seems more like the mother and grandmother she is than a revolutionary. But as a founder of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation, she has in fact helped revolutionize the way the press and the public view one of the angriest debates in America -- whether an adult can ...

  4. Subreption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subreption

    In the same dissertation, an example of subreption for Kant is the axiom "every actual multiplicity can be given numerically, and thus every magnitude is finite"; Kant considers this axiom to be subreptive because the concept of time is introduced surreptitiously as the "means for giving form to the concept of the predicate".

  5. Surreptitious Entry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surreptitious_Entry

    Surreptitious Entry is a memoir of Willis George's (1897–?) career as a spy, burglar, and safecracker for the United States government. By his own account, he was a "football player, a clerk, a student of patent law, a stock broker, an aviator and an unsuccessful airplane salesman" [1] until beginning his clandestine career in the Treasury Department.

  6. City of Ontario v. Quon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Ontario_v._Quon

    "The OPD surreptitiously reviewed messages that all parties reasonably believed were free from third-party review", Wardlaw wrote. The OPD could have obtained the information it sought in a number of less intrusive ways without viewing the content of the messages, such as warning Quon ahead of time or asking him to redact personal messages from ...

  7. Talk:Uncle Tom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Uncle_Tom

    A few centuries later, the slave chronicles of pre-Civil War America refer to disgruntled black slaves who “poisoned masters and mistresses with arsenic, ground glass and ‘spiders beaten up in buttermilk’ ”. A popular device in Victorian literature had fictional characters using ground glass to surreptitiously kill off unwanted relatives.

  8. Robbins v. Lower Merion School District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robbins_v._Lower_Merion...

    [4] [5] School authorities surreptitiously and remotely activated webcams embedded in school-issued laptops the students were using at home. [6] [7] After the suit was brought, the school district, of which the two high schools are part, revealed that it had secretly taken more than 66,000 images.

  9. New York Times Co. v. United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Times_Co._v...

    Daniel Ellsberg, who had helped to produce the report, allowed 43 volumes of the 47-volume, 7,000-page report to be viewed by reporter Neil Sheehan of The New York Times in Boston on March 2, 1971, [4] then Sheehan surreptitiously copied them against Ellsberg's wishes and took them by plane to The Jefferson hotel in Washington for initial ...