Word: pal
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Mataji (the name means Revered Mother) announced that the young guru had been replaced by his eldest brother Sat Pal, who would henceforth be spiritual leader of the movement started in 1930 by their father, the late Shri Hansji Maharaj. As Mataji now tells it, the eldest brother had originally been designated as the Bal Bhagwanji...
...Associated Milk Producers Inc., the nation's largest dairy cooperative. The evidence, claimed Sale, would show that the money "left a trail of footprints ... to Mr. Connally." The prosecution has documented its case with bank records and logs of meetings and phone calls between Jacobsen and his old pal Connally...
Precisely what Robert Mitchum is doing in Japan becomes a sticky point. Mitchum plays, rather snugly, a former private eye from California named Harry Kilmer whose pal Tanner (Brian Keith) calls an old marker on him. Tanner has promised to sell the Yakuza some guns but failed to deliver. In reprisal, the Yakuza has kidnaped his daughter and is threatening to kill...
...yard dash--Edward James, Penn; Dave Meyer, Brown: Vince Redden. Cornell 60-yard hurdles--Harold Schawb, Penn. 600-yard run--Rich Nichols, Dartmouth: Pal Roach, Cornell: John Escaller, Brown, 1000-yard run--William Huntley, Penn; Ken Ashworth, Penn; John Stoeckel, Penn. Mile Run--Craig Masback, Princeton; Des Foynes, Columbia; Peter Christ, Penn. Two Mile Run--Dave Merrick, Penn; Ray DeMarco, Cornell; John Cabell, Princeton. One Mile Relay--Dartmouth (Bob Coburn, Joe Duncan, Rich Nichols, Ken Norman). Two Mile Relay--Cornell (Dave Stinson, Steve Braillier. Tom Patterson, Pal Roach). Weight Throw--Phil Bartlett, Brown: DANNY JIGGETTS, Harvard: STEVE NIEMI. Harvard. Shot...
...Street Fighter has little else to offer in the way of novelty, save perhaps for Sonny Chiba, a stepchild of Jack Palance and Magog. The movie is Japanese in origin, not Chinese, as is customary, and contains some comic relief in the person of Chiba's chuckleheaded pal, called Ratnose. Connoisseurs of the etiquette of male affection in films will notice the hero's farewell to the dying Ratnose-giving his nostrils a hearty but melancholy pull-with some guarded delight...