Word: extended
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...rate, the burden of protecting privacy, Grove and his peers contend, lies with cell phoners. "Is everyone entitled to a reasonable expectation of privacy?" asks Grove. "Absolutely." But that right, he says, doesn't extend to those who haven't bothered to get scrambling equipment or one of the new (and much more secure) digital phones. "If you take your clothes off, close your eyes and walk down an airport concourse shouting, 'Don't look at me!,' you might have an expectation of privacy," he says. "But is it reasonable...
...world of alleged use of state troopers to procure women, and purported "bimbo eruptions." Clinton would no doubt be questioned about contentions like paragraph 22 of Jones' complaint: that "[t]here were distinguishing characteristics in Clinton's genital area that were obvious to Jones." Even Justices reluctant to extend presidential privilege may feel that there are some questions the leader of the free world should not have to answer...
...library will serve as an entering wedge in the opening of Cabot 24-7 for the entire academic year. Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis '68 also deserves credit for allocating the necessary money for complementary late night shuttles. Schmelz has said that no plans currently exist to extend the hours into the spring semester, but that if the wee hours of the night prove popular with students during reading period, she will look into the possibility of an extension...
...unlimited bandwidth," an agility at "parallel processing" and "multitasking." Watch him at his desk, and you see what they mean. He works on two computers, one with four frames that sequence data streaming in from the Internet, the other handling the hundreds of E-mail messages and memos that extend his mind into a network. He can be so rigorous as he processes data that one can imagine his mind may indeed be digital: no sloppy emotions or analog fuzziness, just trillions of binary impulses coolly converting input into correct answers...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Republicans delivered a victory present to Newt Gingrich by imposing a January 21 deadline on the Ethics Subcommittee investigation into his fundraising activities. In an unusual Inauguration Day floor battle, Democrats attempted to extend the investigation. They were supported even by the Republican members of the subcommittee, who argued that members could not process the reams testimony and evidence collected on Gingrich in the time allowed. TIME's Tamala Edwards reports that a Republican leadership wanting to put the Gingrich investigation behind them has been helped by the extremely slow pace of the inquiry: "The problem...