Word: bosses
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Crimson's six singles players--Kathy Vigna, Cindy Buchsbaum, Erika Smith, Robin Boss, Cynthia Austrian and Martha Berkman--all dropped decisions to Cardinal opponents...
...doubles play, the Stanford duo of Patty Fendick and Leigh Anne Eldredge defeated Vigna and Smith, 6-1, 7-5. Cari Hagey and Stephanie Savides edged Boss and Berkman, 6-4, 7-6 (with a 7-5 tiebreaker), while Kay Tittle and Marianne Werdell knocked Austrian and Buchsbaum...
Goizueta's second major Hollywood raid came last August with the $485 million buy-out of Embassy Communications and Tandem Productions. Embassy currently has five shows on the air, including Diff'rent Strokes, Silver Spoons and ABC television's surprise hit, Who's the Boss? More important, Embassy, which was formerly owned by Producers Norman Lear and Jerrold Perenchio, holds syndication rights to such shows as Maude, Sanford & Son, One Day at a Time and The Jeffersons. Mike Mellon, a vice president of research for Walt Disney Productions, estimates the value of Embassy's rights at $500 million...
...Pentagon budget. Stockman paid little attention to the base figure on which the Pentagon proposed to calculate that 7%. When he saw the actual numbers pointing to military spending of $1.46 trillion over the next five years, Stockman writes, he "nearly had a heart attack." Later the OMB boss came to the gloomy conclusion that even the most severe cuts in nonmilitary spending would fall $44 billion short of balancing the budget by 1984 (the actual gap, of course, turned out to be vastly greater). His simple solution: slap a "magic asterisk" on the $44 billion figure and call...
...Boss and Berkman prolonged Princeton's agony, taking Meghani and Simons to three sets. The Crimson claimed the first, 6-4, fell 2-6 in the second, and came back in the third...