Word: clues
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
However, Spence does not realize that a memory must be loaded before it can be lost. The CRR's memory has not been loaded. As late as Tuesday, the CRR had no chairman, no student delegates, no decided procedures, and no clue...
...back from Japan, and I much prefer taking a bath in public their way. Show people tend to treat their finances like their dentistry. They assume the man handling it knows what he is doing." Other well-known investors were not talking about their tax-shelter troubles, but a clue to Jong's possible feelings can be found in a scene from her latest novel, Parachutes and Kisses, which is some what autobiographical. The book's central character, Isadora Wing, learns from her accountant that she may have to pay a million dollars in back taxes...
Psychologist Paul Ekman ran the film over and over until he found the clue. Mary, a housewife who had attempted suicide three times and had been confined to a mental institution, appeared chipper and confident onscreen as she asked - her doctor for a weekend pass. Her interview, secretly shot for research purposes, was so convincing that Mary got the pass, but she subsequently admitted that she had been lying and had wanted to get away for another suicide try. By slowing down the film, Ekman found that Mary's face had sagged into despair, a telltale "microexpression" that lasted only...
...people tested, the pitch of the voice rose slightly when they were upset, afraid or angry, a broad clue to the possibility that they were lying...
...more accurate than lie detectors, which have only limited value the way ^ they are currently used." It would also present some painful problems. "What would life be like if we couldn't lie at all," he wonders, "if there were no way we could ever hide our feelings?" One clue to the possible --and eager --beneficiaries of such a world came when Ekman delivered a lecture in Leningrad. Two well-dressed Soviet men asked Ekman many intense questions about his work, then identified themselves as workers in "an electrical institute responsible for interrogation...