Word: couriers
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...over and over again--in reports and conversations--he emphasizes their importance. He lobbied intensively and successfully this year for a University subsidy for Phillips Brooks House. When two civil rights activists came to him several years ago to seek help for a weekly Negro newspaper--the Southern Courier--he lent his support and supplied money from a special College fund for civil rights. He has done the same for other students...
...Alamos as part of what turned out to be the Manhattan Project. In January 1945, he said, Julius Rosenberg asked him to watch out for a new bomb, parts of which he soon found himself machining. On June 3, Green-glass handed lens-mold sketches to a courier who gave the password "I come from Julius." In September, Greenglass went to New York and gave Rosenberg a cross-section sketch of a Nagasaki-type bomb. Greenglass pleaded guilty before testifying, got a 15-year sentence after the trial, and is now free. > Harry Gold, the courier, is also now free...
...Captain was already 72 at the time. During his wife's career he had concentrated largely on the business aspects of publishing and left the editorial product almost entirely to her. Aware that he had much to learn, he brought his old friend, former Louisville Courier-Journal Editor Mark Ethridge, out of retirement to become editor of Newsday and teach him the ropes. And by last year, Captain Harry was ready. Ethridge returned to retirement and Newsday's new boss assumed the title of editor as well as president and publisher. Today, at 76, he energetically discharges...
...Harvard-Radcliffe Combined Charities Drive, which started last night, will continue through Wednesday night. The five recommended charties included: Philips Brooks House, The Southern Courier, Welmut, a halfway house for mental patients, The Ethiopian National Literacy Campaign and Teenage Employment Skills Training...
...reporter for the Louisville Herald. He covered his first beat on horseback, became a Washington correspondent for the Louisville Times just three years later. In 1915 he was home again in Louisville as editorial director of both the Times and its sister paper, the Courier-Journal...