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...Arden greet each other with smiles, order lunch from the clean, bright mean, chat about high interest rates on mortgages, blame the federal deficit and government spending in the red talk about the last and upcoming weekend, eat, and depart with a pleasant handshake saying "thank...

Author: By M. CHARLES Mason, | Title: No More Free Lunches | 3/18/1982 | See Source »

...State Depart restrictions would allow Umnov access only to research "intended to result in openly available documents, or for presentation in lectures, seminars or other academic forums." Howard J. Lewis, a spokesman for the National Academy of Sciences--which is coordinating the visit with the Soviet Academy of Science--said Thursday. Lewis added that the restrictions, decided on this month, also prohibit any visits to industries...

Author: By Jeffrey M. Senger, | Title: State Dept.'s Restrictions Hinder Visit by Scientist | 2/27/1982 | See Source »

Only days after President Reagan called upon all U.S. citizens to leave Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's Libya, the first of some 1,500 Americans expected to depart by the end of next month were dutifully queuing up at the Tripoli International Airport for the flight home. Despite well-publicized U.S. reports that Gaddafi had dispatched hit men to assassinate Reagan, few believed that they were in any real danger of Libyan retaliation. For the occasion, Gaddafi eased usually tight restrictions on journalists to invite members of the foreign press to hear him, presumably, denounce Washington's claims. TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Libya: Heeling to Brother Gaddafi | 12/28/1981 | See Source »

...unthinkable that Remy would depart for greener pastures. Last year at this time people questioned whether Fisk, a New England boy, or Lynn, a Boston institution, would leave the area if the difference was merely money. Maybe they wouldn't have, but by the time the Sox got around to negotiating, the difference was much more than money--it was a matter of pride. The same thing is happening with Remy, and so it is no longer surprising that the Cohasset native who was there when the Sox won it in '67 could very well be in Oakland this time...

Author: By Bruce Schoenfeld, | Title: The Goblins of Fenway | 11/4/1981 | See Source »

...opening issue editorials are any indication, the Crimson seems deadset on rigidly adhering to the same old views it always has, steadfastly refusing to consider perspectives which depart from the traditionally liberal stances it has always embraced. The three editorials in the Crimson's registration issue all advocated liberal solutions to race relations, gay rights and affirmative action--all of which are historically liberal fixations as well. It is ironic that in an era in which the country appears to be looking to conservative solutions, not one of the positons taken by Harvard's central newspaper reflected a conservative opinion...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Stick in the Mud | 10/1/1981 | See Source »

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