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Freshman Gerome Bono played the first table for Harvard and won six of his eight matches. Hugh Tobin, a student at the Law School, played the second table and ended the tournament 4 1/2-3 1/2. At the third table, Clarke finished 7-1. Mitch Tobin played the fourth table for a 51/2-2 1/2 margin...

Author: By Bill Ginsberg, | Title: Chessmen Mate in St. Louis | 1/6/1978 | See Source »

...week shipped copies of a pamphlet entitled 10 Ways to Take On Your Local Bar Association to 50 consumer groups across the nation. The broadside urges formation of local watchdog units to monitor bar regulations, publication of legal directories with fee information, pressure on law firms for more pro bono publico work, and demands for lay voices in the disciplining of lawyers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: At 100, the Bar Confronts Reform | 8/8/1977 | See Source »

...since their divorce in 1975. The pair got double billing at Long Island's Westbury Music Fair last week, but they booked into different hotels. Sonny had his girl friend Susie Coelho in tow, and Cher, newly separated from Husband Gregg Allman, brought along the little ones, Chastity Bono, 8, and nine-month-old Elijah Blue Allman. "The show," says Cher, who glittered onstage in her beaded finery, "is just songs and some patter and the same old Sonny and Cher...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, May 9, 1977 | 5/9/1977 | See Source »

Separated. Cher Bono Allman, 30, TV songstress; and Gregg Allman, 28, former singer with the Allman Brothers band. The couple, married in June 1975, have been separated twice before. Cher, who still performs with ex-Husband Sonny, has requested custody of the Allmans' eight-month-old son Elijah Blue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Apr. 4, 1977 | 4/4/1977 | See Source »

...eradication plant in Mexico, Earl Butz took a plane to California just after the Republican National Convention in Kansas City. He could have flown either Continental or TWA, but his aide, Roger Knapp, chose TWA. In the first-class compartment, the Agriculture Secretary spied Singers Pat Boone and Sonny Bono, and John Dean, the former White House counsel who had blown the whistle on Richard Nixon and had just worked the convention as a writer for Rolling Stone. A gregarious man who likes to flaunt his snappy country-and often barnyard-sense of humor, Butz, 67, wandered over to make...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: EXIT EARL, NOT LAUGHING | 10/18/1976 | See Source »

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