Word: lot
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...dispel the pain. Said Housewife Mary Lawrence: "I feel for parents who have no religious faith. What can you do if you love a child and then lose him? You have to take your strength from somewhere else." Said State Highway Patrolman Dan Gust: "I've seen a lot of accidents. But when you get right down to it, you get hurt just the same as anybody else." Gust's son, Steven, 17, had died in the crash...
Simplot concedes that he was "sucked in" by the market's upswings and sold a lot of contracts in the $19 and $16 range. Says he: "They got things up awfully high. I never sold at such high prices before." He bought back some of the contracts as the market declined, making a profit. But he did not try to make any big purchases until the May 7 expiration, hoping the price would decline even more. On that day, he made an offer of $8, but contract trading stopped...
Burly Ed Ajootian travels to the City of Brotherly Love with a third place finish in the NCAA winter championships under his belt. Sophomore Ajootian possesses "a lot of raw talent," according to Harvard track mentor Bill BcCurdy. "He still has some flaws in his swing," McCurdy admits, "but I'm hopeful he can rip off one big throw to get into the thick of the hunt...
...individual shall solicit in a university dormitory, at any time or for any purpose," and that no student may run a business from his room. This--the "letter of the ban" by Dean Epps--is no different from the "ban" placed on any other firm, agency or individual. A lot of noise has arisen concerning the "banning" of Southwestern from the Harvard dorms, when, according to the Rules and Regulations, every group is banned from the dorms. All recruiting (announcements, signs, interviews and contracting) is done off the campus, and has been for more than a year. Dean Epps charged...
...association between the two has not been a close one. Daley came up the hard way--to this day he lives in the old Irish-Catholic neighborhood in back of the stock yards on Chicago's South Side. It takes a lot of muscle to run a city like Chicago for over twenty years and that strength comes from a well-oiled patronage machine run by tough-talking, bowler-hatted ward bosses--Daley's own kind...