Word: couriers
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...playoff spot away from the Ells Last year, the two rivals played before 6000 in the Now Haven Collectors, where the Else look a stunning 5-0 win. But two weeks later, Harvard got its revenge before the biggest crowd over to see a game in Bright Hockey Courier, smothering the Ells, 3-0, on the way to an Ivy crown and an Eastern title...
...recent Louisville Courier-Journal editorial scowled about "his defense of the indefensible." The Lexington Herald-Leader was stern: "What may be acceptable behavior for an entrepreneur is not acceptable behavior for the Governor." Brown insisted last week that he had never used cocaine, in fact had never even seen any, and that he does not "condone Jimmy Lambert or anybody else who might have used...
...failed to employ more feasible guerrilla strike operations. Says a senior F.D.N. official of his military colleagues: "We even have different field commanders feuding over their territorial prerogatives. One unit was fired on by our own men for crossing into another zone." On the other hand, when a political courier arrived in a field position earlier this month, he was berated by a senior commander: "You have only $150 to give me? I lost five men last night. I need money to feed and now to bury my men." Both F.D.N. wings feel that the U.S. imposition of restraints...
...architects. A former Fortune editor, he belongs to a small band of journalists who have alerted laymen to the folly of the two extreme approaches to the hearts of our cities: neglect and cataclysmic "renewal." Among Whyte's allies are Grady Clay, formerly of the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal, now editor of Landscape Architecture magazine, and Jane Jacobs, who is teaching at Toronto. In the 1958 anthology The Exploding Metropolis, Jacobs wrote, "The point. . . is to work with the city. Bedraggled and abused as they are, our downtowns do work. They need help, not wholesale razing . . . the remarkable intricacy...
...pair landed in Rome, they were met by the CIA's "M" and a cadre of American and Italian intelligence agents. Lombino was hustled away to a hotel a block from the U.S. embassy. Twice during the next day, he met with Franca Musi, a Red Brigades courier who had been captured two weeks earlier in Rome. The Italians thought that Musi, whose family had underworld connections, might give valuable information to Lombino, but she claimed only to know that Dozier was being held some where in Padua...