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...three chiefs in the last six months, first came under public scrutiny when the lockers of five minority policemen were found painted with the letters "KKK." In August, two charges of brutality were brought against the force, and the Boston Bar Association's civil rights department threatened to sue the city over the department's poor affirmative action record...

Author: By Joseph Garcia and Steven R. Swartz, S | Title: The Big Summer News Around Town | 9/21/1982 | See Source »

BRUNSWICK, N.H.--Fifteen minutes into the second half of Saturday afternoon's Harvard-Bowdoin women's soccer game, Bowdoin halfback Sue McLaughlin booted the ball toward the goal from the 30-yard line. Harvard back Debbie Fields raced toward the ball, headed it and deflected it just out of the reach of Crimson netminder Janet Judge. The ball dribbled past Judge and into the net to break a scoreless tie and give Bowdoin a 1-0 advantage...

Author: By Becky Hartman, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: Women's Soccer Team Loses Opener In Double Overtime to Bowdoin, 2-1 | 9/20/1982 | See Source »

Certainly Charles H. Kip, class of 1883, had no idea what direction the cooperative would take when he founded it in March of 1882. He wasn't sue it would last one year, let alone a hundred. But the then Harvard junior was concerned about the $150 tuition the College charged and wanted to find some way to combat what he and the other students felt were exorbitant prices charged by Harvard Square merchants for books and wood Supported strongly by the Crimson and the nowdefur 'Echo, as well as several influential faculty members, Kip and four of his classmates...

Author: By Michael J. Abramowitz, | Title: 100 Years of Tradition | 9/13/1982 | See Source »

...another was considering a similar offer. But the Law School today refuses to divulge the name of either alleged individual, and Assistant Dean for Academic Administration Stephen M. Bernardi admits that even the more likely of the two has not exactly made his acceptance official. "We couldn't sue him if he doesn't come," Bernardi says...

Author: By Adam S. Cohen, | Title: Law School Dispute | 9/13/1982 | See Source »

...General Counsel Edward Greene said that the new accord will make it easier to solve the cases quietly. Said he: "The alternative, if we suspect insider trading, is to sue the banks, which is public, freeze their funds, which is public, and subject them to embarrassment. The agreement provides a procedure whereby we can conduct an investigation privately and keep the funds frozen until we can work out disclosure of the information. The banks would rather work things out in private. So would we. And that's the beauty of this decision...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Peeking into Those Swiss Vaults | 9/13/1982 | See Source »

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