Word: brennans
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Boston College junior Michelle C. Brennan came in the hope of seeing "a little less mud-slinging than...
...former calm and collected, the latter angry, passionate and dying from consumption. At first, the relationship between the two main characters is tense and strained, with both of them jockeying for position. Wyatt, still unsure about who killed his brother, suspects the Clanton family led by Pa Clanton (Walter Brennan). They represent the bad element of the town. Forced to frequent a Mexican bar, the Clantons are obvious outsiders, whereas Doc Holiday who comes from an aristocratic family in Boston, and Wyatt Earp, who is often awkward but always a gentleman represent the perennial insiders...
...partnership overseeing funds diversified beyond securities. Some of the new investments were money losers. Clifford says more than $4.5 million was invested in a New Jersey resort that he admits "didn't develop in the manner we had hoped." The resort reportedly is partly owned by Robert Brennan, former head of a now-defunct securities firm whose business practices have been under investigation by federal and state regulators. Clifford says, "I didn't know that at the time...
...denied the charges, as he had when suspicions were raised as early ! as 1990, after employees at U.W.A. headquarters in Alexandria began gossiping about the trips Aramony would take with Villasor. Anonymous letters on U.W.A. stationery reached members of the charity's executive committee, a group led by Edward Brennan, chairman of Sears, Roebuck & Co. By 1991 inquiries by the Washington Post may have prompted the U.W.A. board to deepen its investigation and to discover how Aramony's personal expenses were passed off as company expenditures...
Postal workers blame their erratic delivery record on everything from bad weather to traffic problems. Postal Service spokesman Frank Brennan claims that most of America enjoys reliable service with "pockets of problems" in traffic-congested metropolitan areas. But excuses aren't likely to carry much weight. In an era of instant communication, of E-mail and faxes, consumers have no patience for lost letters...