Word: bathed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...been tracking down the chief of European operations for Black September. They thought they would be led to him when they began following a Black September agent from southern Europe to Stockholm, then to Oslo and finally to a small Norwegian resort city, Lillehammer. There, in a public bath, the Septembrist approached another Arab, Ahmed Bouchiki, 30, who looked like the Black September chief. Realizing his mistake, the agent stammered an apology and left. Bouchiki sensed that he had been checked out for some purpose and later told his in-laws that he was alarmed...
...reason to be. The Israelis concluded that he was their quarry, though a brief investigation would have shown them that Bouchiki, who had come to Norway from Marseille six years before, was a waiter in a health sanatorium in Lillehammer. Two days after the encounter in the bath, the Israelis lay in wait for Bouchiki as he and his wife emerged from a movie theater. When the couple boarded a bus to go home, two agents in a rented car sent a message by walkie-talkie. As the Bouchikis got off the bus, a car approached. Out jumped a pair...
...Alexandria, Va. There, Maureen, his brittlely attractive wife who sat somewhat tensely behind Dean in the hearing room, prepared hamburgers. Then Dean and the lawyers went over the day's testimony and watched evening newscasts but not reruns of the day's performance. After a hot bath and a rubdown by "Mo," Dean would get to sleep by 11:30 p.m. Despite the tension, he said he slept well...
...Soviet slave labor camps to claim the throne of Spain. Or the time he went to Japan on his own and wound up in "a wild round of I Spy, featuring Koto-playing geishas, Chi-Com masters, and a beautiful Nipponese belle who's simply murder in the bath." Hazardous Duty's burglary scene is of special interest, however, to readers who know that Author David St. John is really E. Howard Hunt, the convicted Watergate conspirator...
...major cases. This was partly because immunity was not legally available in the majority of criminal investigations. In addition, most immunity statutes barred prosecution for any "transaction, matter or thing" referred Jo in the testimony; so there was always .the possibility that a witness would take an "immunity bath" by mentioning every crime he had ever committed...