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

Time after time he made seemingly unbelievable catches. Only after the game did he admit in having lined his glove with flypaper...

Author: By Archibald A. Acorn iii, | Title: Crimson Nine Tops Independent, 23-2 | 3/24/1975 | See Source »

...over minorities and women for non-tenured and tenured positions, the University should create search committees which contain significant numbers of both of these groups as well as students, for these are the people who are most committed to affirmative action. Glaring examples of the failure to hire or admit significant numbers of women or minorities are found in the administration offices of the University-particularly in the administration of Radcliffe, and in the Departments...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Where's The Action? | 3/22/1975 | See Source »

WALTER RIPPERTON had to admit that, despite everything, he felt unemployed. Laid off in October from his job as a steelworker, he hadn't been back to work since. Instead, he padded around the house in his bathrobe and a pair of worn argyle socks each day, getting dressed on Thursdays to pick up his unemployment check. He watched people winning thousands of dollars on "The $10,000 Pyramid" and "Hollywood Squares," rearranged the living room furniture with his wife a few times, and generally would have been more relaxed than he ever imagined he could be, had he known...

Author: By Rich Meislin, | Title: My Jug Runneth Under | 3/19/1975 | See Source »

...GSAS, the culprits are the individual departments' faculties, which are ultimately responsible for admitting graduate students. Phillip T. Gay, the minority recruiter for the GSAS, realized the departments would be problem when he took the job, but because he was not involved in the admissions process, he could not do anything about it. The 48 departments of the GSAS each admit their own graduate students, and any centralized recruiting effort was bound to fail. But a centralized recruiting policy is not so much to blame as the faculty members who make decisions on admissions. According to Gay, Peter S. McKinney...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Negligent Recruiting | 3/18/1975 | See Source »

...this shop H.R. Haldeman is a current hot news story ... Maybe in ten years it would be appropriate to pay for Mr. Haldeman's memoirs, not now." NBC News President Richard C. Wald adds: "It was not a thing I would want to do." Still, both men admit to a "gray area" where they might pay for an interview. Sheehan sees "a legitimate case for this if we are making use of a person's expertise in a non-news situation." Wald concedes that his own network in 1962 bought interviews with the parents of the Fischer quints...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Paying for News? | 3/17/1975 | See Source »

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