Word: sues
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...Whenever I get the urge to exercise, I lie down until it goes away." In Detroit, Correspondent Christopher Redman always thought all forms of public muscle building were unseemly. "I'm a closet exerciser," he says, "but "I'm seriously thinking about coming out." Senior Reporter-Researcher Sue Raffety resumed a running program she had stopped some years ago, and recently completed a 13.1-mile half-marathon in an eminently respectable 1 hr. 53 min. Raffety also swims a mile every morning before work. "Swimming and running," she says, are my total tranquilizer." Senior Editor Timothy Foote...
Reported by Sue Raffety/New York and Christopher Redman/Detroit, with other U.S. bureaus
...make a public apology-run up and down Pennsylvania Avenue bare-bottom, shouting 'I'm sorry'?" He hasn't yet-but last week the Post looked a little bare-bottomed as it made a front-page apology to the Carters, who then dropped plans to sue. The Post admitted publishing what "we later find to be untrue." How did it get itself into such...
...desk. As for Bradlee, he disclaimed any part in the editorial and seemed to be reliving the days of Deep Throat; he had been "eyeball to eyeball" with the gossip columnist's source, who got it from "two members of the Carter family-the personal family." Let them sue; the Post's countersubpoenas would fly. After the retraction, a chastened but unrepentant Bradlee insisted that, alas, "my source changed his number on me, from bugged to taped"; the item couldn't be defended...
Talent: There's no substitute for it. Even if the feet on the Crimson bench can't fill the shoes on the field, there's no overlooking the ability of Harvard's starting 11. Striker Kelly Landry broke Sue St. Louis's season scoring record two games ago, and Landry, co-striker Alicia Carrillo, Ferrante et. al. are the first Harvard team with the skills to operate a ball-control offense effectively...