Word: allan
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Enser W. Cole 3rd of Arlington, Va. (Biology); Harvey V. Fineberg of Pittsburgh, Pa. (Psychology); D. N. Fruedenberger of Rochester, N.Y. (English); Allan R. Glass of Fairefield, Conn. (Engineering and Applied Physics); David R. Goldman of Maplewood, N.J. (English); Stephen Griffith of Washington, D. C. (Government); Walter Hellerstein of New York (Government); Paul C. Julien of Waltham (Physics); D. B. MacDonald of Mercer Island, Wash. (History); E.J. McDonald Jr. of Washington, D.C. (Biology); Daniel C. S. Moulton of New York (Classics); James E. Pesando of Andover (Economics) and Woodriff D. Smith of San Antonio, Tex. (History...
...Toronto gave the Leafs much chance to make even the playoffs. Coach George ("Punch") Imlach's team was the oldest in the league, held together with stitches, tape and pride. Captain George Armstrong was 36 and quite possibly in his last season; Forward Red Kelly was 39; Defenseman Allan Stanley, 41. Goalie Johnny Bower admitted to 42. And behind him in the nets was Terry Sawchuk, 37, bothered by a chronically bad back and talking about retirement after an illustrious 20-year career that won him four Vezina trophies as hockey's top goalie. The experts considered...
...business" in the manner, if not with the mania, of James Bond and Batman. In return for royalties, manufacturers will be licensed to stick "USLTA" and "Davis Cup Team" endorsements on everything from sweat socks to sunglasses. This newest type of tennis racket was proposed by Licensing Corp. President Allan Stone, 43, who won the skeptical USLTA over by arguing that 1) the U.S. Olympic Committee has endorsed Chap Stick and other items, and 2) the royalties should reach $250,000 within two years. Says USLTA President Robert J. Kelleher: "We never really knew how much our endorsements were worth...
Director Richard Gottlieb and his evil men (Allan Shapiro, Mike Civin, Bill Gray, and John Burslem) go for easy laughs occasionally, but spin some clever scenes, particularly their demonstration of a stock maneuver with salt shakers balanced on wine glasses...
Lincoln's CIA. White tie is a far cry from the original force. Founder Allan Pinkerton, who was Chicago's first police-force detective, went into the private-eye business on his own in 1850. Later he organized a kind of CIA for Abraham Lincoln. Pinkerton unearthed one assassination plot against Lincoln, spirited the President-elect to Washington for his first inaugural by a circuitous rail route that produced a famous telegram: PLUMS [Pinkerton] ARRIVED WITH NUTS [Lincoln] THIS MORNING. Plums and his men acted as Union spies during the Civil War, set up the Secret Service, spent...