Word: smilingly
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Despite the uncertainties, hundreds of street performers from all over the world gravitate toward Harvard Square during the summer months to play music, juggle fire or do a little magic. "It's so great to sit here, and out of the corner of my eye see someone smile," says Carol Hetrick, who plays violin along Brattle St. to supplement her income as an administrator at the Longy School of Music. "It makes it all worthwhile...
Helping oversee Harvard's billions is Vice President for Financial Affairs Thomas O'Brien. A big, journal man with a ready wink and a smile, O'Brien is in charge of enforcing the every-tub-on-its-own-bottom rule. All of the University's 50-some departments, faculties, museums, research centers and libraries must prove to O'Brien, who approves each of their budgets, that their every-increasing financial demands are justified...
...thanks to anyone and everyone who had kept the hostages in thoughts and prayers. When he finished, there was an awkward moment, as though no one was quite sure what came next. Reagan spontaneously filled in the missing lines. He leaned over to the microphone and said, with a smile and a note of gentle exhortation, "Go home...
...Mosser, 45; Texas Trial Lawyer Kelly Ireland, 42; and Pennsylvania Grocer Angelo Spagnolo, 31. "I took up golf because my bowling was so bad," Spagnolo explained, "though I didn't lose that many bowling balls." Given the blessing of PGA Commissioner Deane Beman, a man with an inclination to smile, the foursome was brought to the Tournament Players Club in Ponte Vedra, Fla., essentially an unplayable course. Observing rules that practically every amateur ignores, they played from championship distances that on many holes put the fairway beyond the reach of their best shot...
Former Diplomat, Politician and Journalist Arne Treholt, 42, was grinning last week as he entered Room 23 of the Oslo courthouse. But by the time Judge Astri Rynning finished speaking, the smile had vanished. After a 17-week trial, a panel of judges found Treholt guilty of spying for the Soviet Union and Iraq. Among the vital secrets he is believed to have passed along in ten years as an undercover agent for the KGB: details of NATO strategy and military contingency plans, alliance intelligence documents on troubled areas and Norwegian government confidential memos on meetings with world leaders. "Treholt...