Word: bradleys
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...former mayor also criticized Washington for failing to establish a connection to the low-income neighborhoods of the city. "When Mayor Goode won, he reached out, as did Mayor Bradley. That did not happen in Chicago," she said...
...Quincy; Suspended Requirement to Withdraw for Lowell Zachary Robinson GSAS Suspended Requirement to Withdraw for Lowell John N. Ross '87 Suspended Requirement to Withdraw for Lowell Catherine Schuyler '85 Admonition for 17 Quincy; Suspended Requirement to Withdraw for Lowell Damon A. Silvers '86 Charges not substantiated for Lowell Bradley R. Stam '87 Admonition for 17 Quincy St. Jake Stevens '86 Admonition for 17 Quincy St. Andrew C. Svarre '86 Charges not substantiated for Lowell Melissa W. Wright '87 Admonition for 17 Quincy St. Michael C. Young '88 Admonition for 17 Quincy...
When Nation of Islam Leader Louis Farrakhan added a taint of anti-Semitism to Jesse Jackson's 1984 campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, many black leaders seethed--but in silence. No longer. After Farrakhan laced a + speech in Los Angeles last month with racist remarks, Mayor Tom Bradley condemned the Black Muslim's "dangerous" anti-Semitism and said he and the minister were "poles apart." Before Farrakhan was to speak this week in Madison Square Garden, a coalition of the city's black and Jewish leaders denounced him. Said black City Clerk David Dinkins: "When (Farrakhan's) opinions express...
...across the scarring years." A 16- year-old farm boy named Charles Lindbergh is free to buy a war-surplus "Flying Jenny." Wounded Ambulance Driver Ernest Hemingway, recalling a successful offensive in Italy, writes home: "Gee but it was great though to end it with such a victory!" Omar Bradley, a 25-year-old Army officer stuck at a post in Iowa, morosely hears the whistle blasts, certain that he is "professionally ruined." In the censorship section of the Liverpool post office, J.C. Silber listens to the "majestic tolling" of church bells and is "glad to get away from...
...satellite television. The USIA's new Worldnet linkup can put U.S. officials on the nightly news all over the globe. When the Soviets pulled out of the 1984 Olympics, nearly 60 million viewers in Africa and Europe watched Olympics Czar Peter Ueberroth and Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley rebut Soviet complaints about inadequate security and alleged racism. Last April Worldnet began beaming a global two-hour morning news-and- entertainment show, complete with a perky anchor, called America Today. The USIA is now considering equipping Afghan "freedom fighters" with minicams to film action footage of Soviet aggression...