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Word: deeley (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...MATTER HOW adept the director, however, it is the actors themselves who must carry "Old Times". The play involves the relationships between a married couple, Deeley and Kate, who are visited by Kate's old friend Anna, Kate's roomate from her single years in London...

Author: By Rachel H. Inker, | Title: A Memory a Trois | 12/14/1984 | See Source »

Peter Howard is fantastic as Deeley. His greatest challenge is in the rendition of Deeley's more lengthy narratives, marked by the usual Painteresque ambiguity, of relating his past. Howard, through his angry, sarcastic harangues, conveys his humiliation and frustration...

Author: By Rachel H. Inker, | Title: A Memory a Trois | 12/14/1984 | See Source »

...total at between 2,000 and 3,000 units. One reason the Government has been slow to install scrambled lines has been the cost: each secure unit runs about $31,000. Another has been complaints from users that voice quality is poor. Even so, concedes Walter Deeley, the NSA'S deputy director for communications security, a study he conducted last year on communications security showed telephones to be the biggest leakage problem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is It Safe to Use the Phone? | 10/29/1984 | See Source »

Working with five of the nation's largest manufacturers of telephone equipment, (AT&T, ITT, Motorola, RCA and GTE), NSA officials believe technology has been developed that will lead to what Deeley, in computer jargon, calls "a user-friendly secure phone" at a cost of less than $2,000 a unit. Scrambling units in current use weigh about 70 lbs. and take up the space of two filing-cabinet drawers. Electronics experts expect the new units to employ small, inexpensive microcircuits built directly into the telephone receiver. The scrambler converts signals produced by conversation into electronic "white noise" that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is It Safe to Use the Phone? | 10/29/1984 | See Source »

...Deeley predicts that production of the new generation of secure phones will begin within two years. By the end of the decade, NSA officials plan to install half a million of them: 200,000 in Government offices and an additional 300,000 in private companies that have access to classified or sensitive Government information. Within ten years they expect the total number of secure telephones in the U.S. to reach 2 million, or about one out of every 120 of the nation's horns. "Communication security is not like guns, ships or bullets," says Deeley. "It's sort...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is It Safe to Use the Phone? | 10/29/1984 | See Source »

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