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Word: suspect (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

What is known is that the groups are growing increasingly violent. FBI officials suspect that radicals have committed some of the state's recent unsolved murders. Among these is the slaying of Wilbert ("Popeye") Jackson, a black activist who the FBI believes was killed because radicals suspected-incorrectly-that he was a squealer. Last year the radicals claimed responsibility for 19 bombings in California; so far this year they have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RADICALS: CALIFORNIA'S UNDERGROUND | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...confiscated material led investigators to suspect that the S.L.A. financed its activities by staging bank robberies. As a result, the agency has opened fresh investigations of a score of unsolved bank robberies in California in the past 17 months. The FBI has already linked Patty or her companions to two jobs. On Feb. 25, the Guild Savings & Loan Association in Sacramento was robbed of $3,700. Authorities say that the apparent leader of the holdup was a man described as resembling Bill Harris. The driver of the getaway car was a young woman. Going through the material found...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE HEARST CASE: WHICH PATTY TO BELIEVE? | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...fingerprints of Steven Soliah, 27, the "Charlie Adams" with whom she moved into her San Francisco apartment. Also on the license plate were the fingerprints of one of Soliah's sisters, Kathleen, and of a friend, James Kilgore. Kathleen Soliah is now being sought for general questioning. Authorities suspect that Kilgore was the man who hired a San Francisco mover on Sept. 21 to carry a wicker basket to a vacant lot 1½ blocks from the city's Ingleside police station. The mover became wary, looked into the basket and discovered a 14-in. pipe bomb wired...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE HEARST CASE: WHICH PATTY TO BELIEVE? | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...hunters check hotels in Lower Manhattan, and a clerk at the Seville on 29th Street recognizes the picture of Segarra. At 1:10 a.m., an officer raps on the door of the suspect's room, identifies himself, then breaks in when he hears sounds of the door's apparently being barricaded. Segarra, 24, dressed in his underwear, is there with his wife and three-year-old son. He spread-eagles himself on the bed and surrenders. He says that he last saw Velez, the suspected killer, at an apartment on Clinton Street. Thirty-five officers go there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: Anatomy of a Man Hunt | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...museum," Nadelman wrote to a friend in 1937, with his usual reticent dignity, "did also dismantle something in me." The market for his own sculpture slowly caved in. By 1946 the very word elegance-the passion of Nadelman's life and the quality of his sculptures-had become suspect. "Elegance" had nothing to do with social utility, or Freudian disclosures, those ruling interests of a postwar American avantgarde. So the oubliette yawned and swallowed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Easy to Love | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

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