Word: differences
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...essence of literacy -- the printed book that started it all." Peter Israel, president of the Putnam Publishing Group, Inc., dismisses talking books as a "fad, certainly, but I'm not sure it's a real business." But those who have made a commitment to electronic literature beg to differ. Newman Communications Corp., one of the fastest-growing tape publishers in the U.S., began in 1981 with sales of less than $200,000, which leaped to more than $7 million three years later. "We're not dealing with a Hula-Hoop phenomenon," says its president, Harold J. Newman. "The underlying base...
...tube. Lasky did not venture to guess if these antibodies can be formed in a human body, and the necessary tests could take months or years. To complicate matters, Robert Gallo of the National Cancer Institute reported that samples of virus isolated from the brains of AIDS victims inexplicably differ from the form of virus that commonly attacks the T cells of the immune system...
...their own frequent accounts in the public prints, the Lloyds are prone to slight disagreements. He has liked rock music; she has liked a rock musician. But they differ on nothing else quite as much as tennis. To Chris, "It's in your blood, putting something on the line every day. It's a great feeling when you win. And when you lose, I think you're wiser." But the Englishman she married in 1979 never regarded tennis as a blood sport or a life. While Chris expressed eagerness even for practice, John had to admit, "It was such...
...what kind of bill will it be? The Senate and House measures have the same broad outline: each would lower and simplify income tax rates and offset the revenue loss by killing hundreds of exceptions and deductions. Yet they differ in dozens of all-important details. One example: the House bill preserves but the Senate measure ends for most people the deductibility of annual contributions to Individual Retirement Accounts. Should the Senate version prevail in conference, that one provision would cost taxpayers $25.5 billion over the next five years...
...Baby Boomers perceive themselves and their times? How do their perceptions differ from those of earlier generations? To find out, TIME commissioned a poll by Yankelovich, Clancy, Shulman of 1,007 Americans 18 years and older, plus an additional sample of 514 Americans between the ages of 30 and 40.* Some of the more significant results...