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...ranking Radcliffe player Ruth Stevens and Wellesley's Genie Ware played a very tight, smooth match, which fell to Ware, 15-13, 15-2, 15-11. Ware won the intercollegiate nationals last year...

Author: By Sarah K. Lynch, | Title: Wellesley Dumps Radcliffe, 5-0, In Year's First Squash Match | 12/11/1973 | See Source »

Stevens managed to return many of Ware's hard, well-controlled rail serves and slicing backhand,, but tired in the second game. She made a strong comeback in the final game, tucking the ball continually into the back corner...

Author: By Sarah K. Lynch, | Title: Wellesley Dumps Radcliffe, 5-0, In Year's First Squash Match | 12/11/1973 | See Source »

Journalists still face imprisonment for refusing to name their sources. St Petersburg Times Reporter Lucy Ware Morgan has been sentenced to five months in jail unless she tells a Pasco County judge where she got her information for a story on a grand jury that had decided not to issue any indictments. An appeal is pending, and Times Editor Eugene Patterson is attempting to go to jail in his reporter's place. Patterson may get half his wish. The judge is considering whether the editor exposed himself to contempt charges when he ordered Mrs. Morgan not to name...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Threats to Freedom | 11/26/1973 | See Source »

...ASANTEHENE OF GHANA. Otumofuo [All Highest] Nana Opoku Ware II, King of Ghana's 1.8 million Ashanti, still wields considerable power as Keeper of the Golden Stool. A barrister in the Ashanti capital of Kumasi until he became a king in 1970 (succeeding his uncle), Nana Opoku, 54, is all but coddled by Ghana's leaders. In turn, he takes a lively-but noninter-fering-interest in national affairs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AFRICA: The Dark Continent's Royal Remnants | 9/10/1973 | See Source »

...getting a pretty good price, since the auction listings had that edition priced at about $50. But the dealer sold the book to another dealer for $600, and he turned around and sold it to Harvard for $2000. "That's because it was a presentation copy to Henry Ware," says Mr. Starr. "He was Emerson's minister, and he almost convinced Emerson to go into the ministry." Mr. Starr is full of biographical information about American literary figures, and when you ask him how he learned it, he says: "Well, it's from being in the business...

Author: By Wendy Lesser, | Title: The Business | 5/17/1973 | See Source »

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