Word: malley
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...about half that number. Roz Brayton will return to lead the staff with Sandy Weissant expected to grab the number two spot. Barry Malinowski, another returner from last spring, also appears set. Fighting for the remaining positions on the staff are Tom O'Neill, Norm Walsh, Mike O'Malley and Kim Schapport...
...situation. He is a tough-minded, chillingly efficient young man named James Kinsella, who has been schooled in ecumenical diplomacy and trained in the dubious art of using power to revolutionary ends. Presenting the superchurch's problem to the old abbot, a man named Tomas O'Malley, Kinsella assures him smoothly that it is not a matter of heresy -merely one of creating "a uniform posture...
Harassment. Directing the campaign for the Irish government is Justice Minister Desmond O'Malley, 33, a brash political fighter whose antipathy toward the I.R.A. was sharpened by the recent bombing of his father-in-law's pub just north of the border. Under O'Malley's authority, the government has prosecuted more than 100 I.R.A. men on various charges, tightened controls on firearms and explosives, and last month raided and padlocked the Provisional Sinn Fein offices in Dublin. This week the government will present to the Irish Parliament a bill that seeks to redefine membership...
...week's end, O'Malley had won his first round against the I.R.A. A special court, sitting without a jury, sentenced MacStiofáin to six months in prison on charges of membership in an unlawful organization. But the Irish Government's troubles with him were far from over: MacStiofáin said he would starve himself to death unless released. It did not seem to be an idle threat. In the past half century five I.R.A. men have sought martyrdom by continuing a hunger strike to the agonizing end. MacStiofáin was on the seventh...
Other documents released by the Foreign Office last week indicate that British officials said nothing about the atrocity to the Russians for fear of disrupting Allied unity. As O'Malley sadly put it, in a message seen only by Winston Churchill's Cabinet and King George VI: "We have, in fact, perforce used the good name of England to cover up the massacre...