Word: angelos
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...Washington, Congressmen raised questions about the need for new regulation of the securities industry and promised lengthy hearings on the insider- trading issue. A more aggressive response came from Angelo Oriolo, 66, a retired businessman from Pennsville, N.J., who last week filed a class-action lawsuit in U.S. district court against Boesky and others implicated in the ^ scandal. Oriolo alleged that he had been injured financially in September 1985 when he sold 100 shares of General Foods stock. According to the SEC's complaint against Boesky, he made illegal profits from insider trading on General Foods. The Oriolo lawsuit...
Washington: Strobe Talbott, Ann Blackman, David Aikman, David Beckwith, Gisela Bolte, Jay Branegan, Ricardo Chavira, Anne Constable, Patricia Delaney, Michael Duffy, Hays Gorey, David Halevy, Jerry Hannifin, Neil MacNeil, Johanna McGeary, Barrett Seaman, Alessandra Stanley, Dick Thompson, Bruce van Voorst New York: Bonnie Angelo, Joseph N. Boyce, Cathy Booth, Dean Brelis, Sandra Burton, Mary Cronin, Thomas McCarroll, Raji Samghabadi Boston: Robert Ajemian, Joelle Attinger, Melissa Ludtke, Lawrence Malkin Chicago: Jack E. White, Barbara Dolan, Lee Griggs, Harry Kelly, J. Madeleine Nash, Elizabeth Taylor Detroit: William J. Mitchell Atlanta: Joseph J. Kane, B. Russell Leavitt, Don Winbush Houston: Richard Woodbury Miami...
...year campaigns, TIME correspondents fanned out across the country, often to out-of-the-way locales. Los Angeles Bureau Chief Dan Goodgame found himself climbing up the sideboards of mud-spattered beet trucks while covering the campaign of Idaho Republican Steve Symms, who won a second Senate term. Bonnie Angelo, who heads the New York bureau, searched a small town in Maryland with Democrat Barbara Mikulski, who would later win her Senate bid, as she tried to find the hall where she was supposed to speak. In Sheyenne, N. Dak. (pop. 307), Chicago Bureau Chief Jack White found supporters...
...Commission trial is not expected to produce a turncoat as high ranking as Cleveland Underboss Angelo Lonardo, the top U.S. mobster to sing so far. He learned how to be a turncoat the hard way. Charged with leading a drug ring, Lonardo was convicted after a lesser hood, Carmen Zagaria, testified about the inner workings of the Cleveland Mob. Zagaria described how the bodies of hit victims were chopped up and tossed into Lake Erie. Lonardo, who wanted to avoid a life sentence, then helped prosecutors break the Las Vegas skimming case...
Some of that excitement comes with the territory. Angelo now deploys seven correspondents and a multitude of stringers up and down an area that extends from the northern suburbs of Washington to the Canadian border...