Word: a-year
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Mark Lane, who has lived substantially for the past 13 years off writings and lectures attacking the Warren Commission, and Bernard Fensterwald Jr., who once represented James Earl Ray. Lane had the sense to bow out, but he recommended the man who was eventually appointed as the $39,600-a-year chief sleuth: Richard A. Sprague, 51, a tough-minded former district attorney from Philadelphia...
Moore's various duties for the CIA apparently included "logistics," but the agency refused to be more specific. After a heart attack in 1973, he retired on an estimated $15,000-a-year disability pension. Father of four children and a voluble antiCommunist, he was considered a bit eccentric by neighbors. They reported that he was the sort of man who would rail at their teen-age sons one day and try to make amends the next by righting their overturned garbage cans...
...president, they found barely 20 whom they considered qualified. They finally picked Madeline McWhinney, 54, an economist who had been an assistant vice president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank but had no experience in commercial banking. Then, in September, she resigned from her $37,500-a-year job, complaining, insiders say, that she had grown weary of dealing with a board whose main devotion seemed not to banking but to a cause. The bank is now headed -temporarily-by a man: Executive Vice President Robert Benedict, 35, who last January was hired away from a branch manager...
Julian Fredie, the former Buildings and Grounds administrator who was charged with threatening the Radcliffe woman, lost his $14,000-a-year job, and Overton says he may face expulsion from the University...
...become enmeshed in the French underworld. Around the time of the death of his wife, who drowned in a bathtub last March, De Vathaire took up with a nightclub hostess, the estranged wife of a man wanted by the Paris police. A friend of hers introduced the $60,000-a-year accountant to Jean Kay, a flamboyant adventurer best known for his aborted 1971 hijacking of a Pakistan Airlines plane supposedly for the purpose of sending food to Bangladesh. He is also a mercenary who has fought in Biafra, Yemen, Angola and Nigeria...