Word: sleuth
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Importance of Being Earnest--Charles St. at 8 Footholds--Newbury St. Theatre at 8 Jean Cocteau--French Library at 8:30 Paul Robeson--Colonial Theatre at 8 Sleuth--Theatre by the Sea at 8:30 Twelfth Night--Boston Shakespeare at 8 The Reason We Eat--Boston Rep at 8:08 Outside the Door--Reality Theatre at 8 The Outcast--Boston Rep at 8 Forbidden Fruits--Loeb Ex at 7:30 The Indian Wants the Bronx--Charles...
Importance of Being Earnest--8:00 Footholds--8:00 Jean Cocteau--8:30 Paul Robeson--8:00 Chile, Chile--Caravan Theatre at 7 and 9:30 Sleuth--8:30 Taming of the Shrew--Boston Shakespeare at 8 The Reason We Eat--8:08 Outside the Door--8:00 The Outcast--8:00 Forbidden Fruits--7:30 The Indian Wants The Bronx...
Importance of Being Eamest--8:00 Footholds--8:00 Jean Cocteau--8:30 Paul Robeson--2 and 8:00 Chile, Chiie--7 and 9:30 Sleuth--5 and 9:00 Twelfth Night--8:00 The Reason We Eat--6:30 and 9:30 Outside the Door--8:00 The Indian Wants The Bronx--8 and 10:00 The Outcast--8 and 10:00 Krapp's Last Tape and I Stopped and Turned--Caravan Theatre and 8:30 Forbidden Fruits...
American correspondents working abroad have for years traded half-joking innuendoes about colleagues they suspected of moonlighting for the Central Intelligence Agency, but no one ever knew for sure. Carl Bernstein claims he knows. In the issue of Rolling Stone on sale Oct. 4, the former Washington Post Watergate sleuth alleges that at least 400 employees of American news organizations have worked directly for or informally aided the agency over the past 25 years, often with their bosses' approval...
...cover story on the Mafia, our third in eight years, TIME correspondents in five major cities interviewed local federal authorities, talked with gangsters and followed their elusive tracks into casinos, pizza parlors, skyscraper offices and political hangouts. Covering the Mob casts the reporter in the role of sleuth-cultivating sources, comparing notes and collating data into hypotheses. Among the correspondents doing this detective work were New York Bureau Chief Laurence Barrett and John Tompkins, who are no strangers to the machinations of the Mob. Barrett edited TIME's first Mafia cover in 1969; Tompkins is a co-author...