Word: corrections
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...hard-pressed Harvard basketball fans--who have never tasted championship glory in over four decades of Ivy League play--Sullivan's words are all too correct. This long and dreary season has taken on a familiar look...
Since the Peso devaluation, many journalists have been scrambling to say Ross Perot was not correct when he predicted the perils of the North American Free Trade Agreement. In hindsight, they say, of course, everybody knew that the Mexican peso was overvalued, that the financial reserves were declining and that Mexican imports greatly exceeded exports! Give Ross the credit he deserves; he had the courage to state the obvious when many others closed their eyes during the NAFTA debates...
...saved by the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to 63,000, from several hundred thousand. In addition, it focused on pictures and narrative about the Japanese who suffered and died. Rep. Peter Blute (R-Mass.), one of the congressional critics, said the original exhibit amounted to "a politically correct diatribe on the nuclear age." The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., now will simply display the famous bomber's fuselage and show a video of its crew...
...OTTL follows the company's use of the technique or product, and makes sure the royalties the company is paying are correct, according to Brinton...
Brandeis may have been correct that the states are better able to experiment in search of novel public-policy solutions. But most public-policy dilemmas of today do not await novel solutions. They await the simple will to make unpleasant tradeoffs between our desire for government services and our desire not to pay for them. The notion that there is some novel solution out there waiting to be discovered -- one that avoids the need for such trade-offs -- is a childish fantasy...