Word: access
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Although officials in the office of the registrar said they were uncertain how many groups had bothered to advertise in the general packet, they added that any officially registered group may have access to the 6500 envelopes, if they are willing to stuff them personally...
...Compact shelving, which involves installing new hardware. Stacks are put on rollers with just enough maneuvering room to permit access to one-stack at a time. The Law School's 1.4 million volume Langdell Library has been able to install compact, shelving successfully and came the burden there, as has the 160,000 volume Tozzer Library in the Peabody Museum...
...said the Chicago Tribune's Jon Margolis when asked if he would be a regular on Walter Mondale's chartered 727. "This is a hermetically sealed tube." Yet the only thing worse than living with the plane is living without it; traveling alone denies the reporter easy access to the candidates and their staffs. When the Mondale campaign announced arrangements for its new chartered plane, it said that in order to provide regulars with the luxury of having the middle seat of each row empty, some newspapers, including the Tribune, would not have a reserved seat. The ensuing...
...perceptions of the U.S. are molded by the Soviet government. The broadcasts will be augmented by reports on NBC News at Sunrise and live interviews from Moscow on the Today Show, conducted by host Bryant Gumble. NBC News' chief foreign correspondent, Garrick Utley, says of the unprecedented access: "We were able to cast our net as broadly as possible. There was no censorship of the tapes whatsoever...
Communist leaders appear to be gambling that U.S. journalists will provide a more favorable picture of the U.S.S.R. than the Reagan Administration has. Says NBC Special Segment Producer Ron Bonn: "They apparently believe that access to a large American audience is worth the risk of exposure." Soviet officials nixed few requests: an interview with Dissident Andrei Sakharov, a visit to Kiev, any views of airports or shots from great heights. To ease the U.S. reporters' way, the Soviets provided sophisticated English-speaking coordinators from the state television network...