Word: mckee
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...Pearce, 3b 3 1 1 1 St. John, ss 3 0 2 1 Wark, c 3 1 1 1 Totals: 31 8 12 6 NAVY AB R H BI See, rf 3 0 0 0 Petro, lf 3 0 0 0 Seiler, 2b 3 1 0 0 McKee, c 3 1 2 1 Mullikin, ss 3 0 2 0 Roberts, 3b 3 0 0 0 Cox, cf 3 0 0 0 Komlo, dh 3 0 0 0 Ravener, 1b 2 0 0 0 Totals...
Five separate Massachusetts state agencies are currently investigating alleged political corruption and improprieties associated with the McKee-Berger-Mansueto, Inc. [MBM]--University of Massachusetts construction contract. The $6 million contract between the state and the MBM construction company led last February to the convictions of former state senators Joseph J.C. DiCarlo and Ronald C. MacKenzie on charges of extorting money from the company. The allegations of misconduct, however, did not end there, and the state is continuing to investigate the relations between MBM and state officials...
Pretty soon Leroy finds himself in Los Angeles, shacked up with a pretty union maid (Lonette McKee), working as a painter for an arm of the same agribiz octopus that chased him away from home, and talking more like this than like thay-uht. He's not a hero, but he's a gifted survivor and a natural-born fink. In return for forgetting what he knows of an assassination attempt by a company thug on the union leader, Leroy is promoted to foreman, and he loses touch with his worker friends in La Causa as quickly...
There's an oddly balanced load of ideology here, and a few other touches that are not right for the Thunderbird-and-chicken-wings film this seems to be. When the Lonette McKee character agrees to live with Leroy, for instance, she plays the scene with Mediterranean fire in her eye and makes him promise never to sleep with another woman. That's not Los Angeles in 1977, and sure enough, it turns out that Which Way Is Up? is an adaptation of Lina Wertmuller's 1972 comedy The Seduction of Mimi, which is set in Sicily...
After finding the name of Daniel J. Shields in old news clippings, Hilder looked up the corporate records of PCM and McKee Berger in the Secretary of the Commonwealth's office. He then turned his information over to William S. Wasserman Jr. '48, publisher and reporter-columnist for the North Shore Weeklies who broke the story on September 2. Hilder also gave the story to The Boston Phoenix, The Boston Globe, which both later published it, as did other daily newspapers in Essex County...