Word: sportswear
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DIED. MARTIN BALSAM, 76, actor; in Rome. Born in the Bronx in New York City, the son of a sportswear salesman, Balsam went from the career-minting Actors Studio to live '50s TV to the movies, where he became a star portraying men who would never be stars. He was an uncertain juror in Twelve Angry Men (1957); a doomed detective in Psycho (1960); a Navy doctor utterly at sea in the moral morass of the nuclear age in The Bedford Incident (1965); and a hardworking family man at odds with his unreliable brother in A Thousand Clowns...
Phill Coleman, the operator of a sportswear shop where detective Mark Fuhrman allegedly made racist comments ten years ago, is refusing to testify out of a concern that thetrial has become a farce. In a letter to Simpson's attorneys dated April 27, Coleman said that he feared trivialization of his testimony and would no longer meet with anybody from the defense. Coleman's decision leaves the defense with a shortage of credible witnesses toestablish their claim that Fuhrman is a racist. There was no testimony today, as Judge Lance Ito conducted a brief hearing and issued an order requiring...
...four-figure ticket. Jordan's touching sentiment on his change of uniform numbers--he didn't want to wear his old 23 if his late father couldn't see it--was somewhat diminished by the fact that even as he played his first game, the Champion sportswear company was turning out Jordan 45 jerseys. Sometimes with Jordan, you don't know where the reality ends and the commercial begins. Asked what playing minor-league baseball did for him, he said, "It helped me realize what was important to me. It was like going to my guru." The reference, of course...
Julian also own a high-end fashion line andclaims he will be able to find another licenseefor his sportswear, sources said...
...alitist tennis world before he collected three consecutive Wimbledon crowns (1934, '36) and three U.S. Open titles (1933, '34, '36). The first court star to win all four Grand Slam events (though never in one year), Perry retired in the late 1940s. He co-founded a profitable sportswear company that sold the kind of natty tennis garb he favored...