Word: domain
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...pounds in a ten to 12 million pound operation), but it helps it o be more solvent and to reach more people with more projects: "In short, here is a classic case of state support being the springboard for private enterprise, which returns its goods directly into the public domain and in the process trains and employs a variety of highly skilled people whose work can and does fertilise other allied enterprises all about the place...
Chris Ivanoff '82: As someone who is not American-born and has relatives in Europe, I believe the "position of strength" Reagan wants to bargain from makes Europe the table on which the cards are being played. That carries the domain of American politics beyond its borders. Reagan's policies shouldn't threaten the security of others and the integrity of their political institutions by pressing them to act against their domestic interests. The American position makes leaders feel they don't have control over their internal affairs. These leaders lose their people's confidence and this threatens European security...
Smack in the center of the red-and-white-striped big top, Arlene Yaple, 63, surveys her domain: prize pumpkins, homemade brownies, dried cornstalks, okra and an American flag crafted of apples and grapes. Square dancers do-si-do to the bidding of a caller on a stage near by, while curious passers-by gape at a 325-lb. squash lying near Yaple's feet. Above the huge oval ring where the plump, gray-haired woman is sitting hangs a carefully lettered wooden sign that reads, "Arlene Yaple: for 35 years superintendent of Granges and Big Top displays. Danbury...
...boom started after the war, Gropius, Le Corbusier and epigones Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Phillip Johnson dominated the profession. So Americans yielded to the wishes of their architectural betters. We had just created the American century, transformed the post-war world into an American plaything, our private domain...
Gossip is transitional between things merely said, or even half said, and positions taken in the public domain. Gossip is a training ground for both self-clarification and public moral action...