Word: buckley
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...Jean Guyton of Kirkland House, first marshal; Sukie Taylor of Lowell House, Sarah Wehle of Currier House, and Victoria Wells of Lowell House, marshals; Joan Porter of Lowell House, secretary; Avarita Hanson of Currier House, treasurer; Carol Allen and Cynthia Leuders, Quad representatives; Linda Buck, Bren Buckley, Ingrid Liu and Gloria Wu, River representatives...
Winners in the running events are: Mike Buckley of Northeastern in the mile; Mark Lech of Northeastern in the 600 yd. run; Ben Butler in the 40 yd. high hurdles; Mike Hickey of Northeastern in the 1000 yd. run; Jim Flore of Northeastern in the two mile run; Harvard in the mile relay with a time of 3:28.6; and Northeastern in the two mile relay with a time...
...Washington officials that legal gold will only draw funds from more socially worthwhile investments: to get up the $52.79, Carlenne cashed two U.S. savings bonds. As an object lesson in the personal hazards of gold ownership, there is the experience of New York's Conservative-Republican Senator James Buckley. A vigorous backer of legal gold on the Hill, Buckley triumphantly plunked down $480 to buy three wafers totaling 2½ oz. from a Manhattan dealer a few moments after it became legal to do so. At week's end his wafers were worth about...
Harvard's most vigorous opponent of the Buckley Amendment, Alan E. Heimert '49, chairman of the English Department, is laid off after a routine check of his files reveals that he forged his letters of recommendation to Harvard in 1945. "This Leviathan-like traducing of my personal privacy pisses me off," Heimert snorts. Special Delivery News Service runs a full-page Crimson advertisement urging subscribers who do not receive their papers to "Give us what we deserve." Later that morning, The Crimson building at 14 Plympton St. is fire-bombed. Nearby, Pat McInally explains to two children and their Irish...
...Buckley holds out the hope that social changes can reduce both the use of handguns and the need for them. Many gun owners, on the other hand, say that since crime is inevitable, the only way to make society safe is to lock the criminals away and, of course, to tote a handgun--the great "equalizer"--for self-defense...