Word: employed
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Both teams are undefeated. Both like to employ the fast break. Both coaches rely on essentially eight men: four forwards and four guards. B.C. is the bigger team, and by all standards the better one: they are ranked in the top fifteen nationally...
Certain branches of the Government have picked up techniques like Cramer's. The Air Force, for instance, will employ his findings to delay speech in one ear for pilots and control tower operators who must communicate through noise interference. Cramer has discovered that a listener tends, as he hears another person speak to latch on to certain tonal qualities in the speaker's voice. As he listens, he will be able to hear and comprehend what the person is saying even through noise interference. With this in mind, instead of speeding speech to save time, Cramer has developed a process...
...skeptical of "free world" rhetoric. But, as Scheer said in his speech at the demonstration, those who employ that rhetoric have a duty to be consistent. It was not courteous to refer to Krushchev as "the butcher of Budapest." But if Krushchev was the butcher of Budapest then McNamara and Johnson are the butchers of Vietnam. If my hypothetical Moscow U. students would have been profoundly in order "physically confronting" Krushchev, then 800 Harvard students were profoundly in order in physically confronting McNamara. Talk of "courtesy" is in the worst taste when butchery is the issue...
...contingent included Editorial Chairman Henry R. Luce, Board Chairman Andrew Heiskell, President James Linen, Editor in Chief Hedley Donovan, Managing Editor Otto Fuerbringer, Senior Editor (of Business) Champ Clark, and the publisher. Most of the invited travelers were principal officers of major business organizations. Together they employ more than 1,200,000 people, and their companies had 1965 sales totaling $33 billion. The group included...
Cornell, meanwhile, will employ its regular juggernaut of Pete Larson, Bill Abel, Ron Gervase, and Ed Zak. They are too powerful for Columbia, but not by too much...