Word: harold
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Initially, the bank had zeroed in on the records of a black boxing promoter named Harold Smith, 37, chairman of an organization called Muhammad Ali Professional Sports, or MAPS, which seemed to be at the center of the scam. But as the investigation went on it became clear that the real mastermind was Lewis, a black who, like Smith, was a board member of MAPS. When told during a Jan. 23 interrogation that auditors from the head office in San Francisco would see him after lunch, Lewis walked out and never returned...
...supports more than 80 per cent of the research and training at the Medical School and School of Public Health, and despite his "generally optimistic attitude about our area," Harold Amos, chairman of the division of Medical Sciences, said researchers "cannot help but be concerned by the messages from Washington...
...press lord, best known for his torrid tabloids. His purchase of the ailing Times of London (circ. 279,000) raised fears that he would vulgarize the staid 196-year-old newspaper with sex and sensation. But last week the din subsided. The reason: Murdoch, 49, named Sunday Times Editor Harold Evans to the top job at the venerable daily. Evans, 52, an esteemed journalist and a passionate campaigner for press freedom, is also tough-an important quality to have when dealing with Murdoch. Says London Guardian Editor Peter Preston: "Evans has as good a chance as anybody to make...
...Murdoch, he promises a new "marketing strategy" to attract a younger audience, a goal Harold Evans endorses. Says Murdoch: "I'm there to save the Times. However important it is as a national institution, it is also a business. We're going to sell more advertising and put the price of the paper up [from 20 pence to an estimated 25 pence]. "And if the unions renege on their pledge to cooperate? "There'll be no difficulty in getting on a plane to Australia. I'll close the place down...
...Goelitz has a standing order to ship up to 60 cases (720 bags) of Jelly Bellys to Washington each month. They go to the White House, to Capitol Hill and just about every Government agency. While John F. Kennedy favored Callard & Bowser toffees, and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan would seldom venture abroad without his kippers, neither statesman's penchant influenced popular taste as Reagan's Bellys have...