Word: openly
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Dates: during 2000-2000
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...Beusekom meekly skated out of the net in a vain attempt to force Shewchuk into a mistake, but Shewchuk undauntedly maneuvered to the left, past the young Princeton keeper, and fired the puck into the open...
Southeastern Conference stalwart Florida (4-0), beat the Crimson, 78-56, to open the tournament on Friday, but, despite the loss, the Crimson can take something positive away from its play, which kept it close to the Gators for much of the game...
...trial itself showed how badly the image of the Los Angeles police has deteriorated. The prosecution was unable to call its star witness, self-confessed corrupt cop Rafael Perez--whose tales of his experiences as a member of the Rampart CRASH unit broke open the scandal a year ago--because of concerns about his credibility. A former girlfriend accused him of three murders, about which he indicated he would plead the Fifth Amendment on the stand. She later recanted, but the prosecution had to fall back on calling known gang members to testify. Yet the jury chose to believe...
...suits," his lawyer told Britain's high court. That may explain how he never noticed until recently that $14 million of his had gone missing. He is suing some of the besuited men--his accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers. The teensy problem with lawsuits about money is that they throw open one's spending habits to the prying eyes of the less pecuniarily blessed. And John had some habits. When the accounting firm's lawyer Mark Hapgood asked him in court if he really spent $57 million in less than two years, he responded, "I don't have anyone to leave my money...
Milton is in the midst of what some experts call the most difficult airline integration in the history of North America. "Trying to improve service while merging the operations of Air Canada and Canadian Airlines is like attempting to douse a fire while an open pipeline of fuel is poured on it," says HSBC Securities analyst Ted Larkin. Air Canada, with a workforce of 23,000, and slightly smaller Canadian, which was bleeding $1.35 million a day, had "computer reservation systems that didn't talk to each other," says Milton, and workers accustomed to "beating each other to death." Milton...