Word: following
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...adhere to the embargo during its suspension. "When we have access to a copy of the Journal, we'll treat it as we do all other news sources and publish on merit," said Desmond Maberley, executive editor of Reuters in North America. Since other news organizations would probably follow suit to stay competitive, such action could shatter the Journal's control over the release of medical news...
...ready-to-be retired. Madison Avenue prepares to tap a vast, long-ignored market. Where once the image of the elderly was of frailty, there are now energy and curiosity, courses to take, choirs to join, diets to break, children to counsel, battles to fight, whims to follow...
...broadcast a presidential address on the eve of the vote. Network executives said there was no news in Reagan's 20- minute plea, and in fact, the speech was full of familiar hyperbolic rhetoric: "Nicaragua is being transformed into a beachhead for aggression against the U.S." In a follow-up address, Indiana Democrat Lee Hamilton offered the prevailing House view. The U.S., he said, should wait and see if Nicaragua sticks with the peace process set in motion by last summer before restoring military aid to the contras. "Now is the time to put the Sandinistas to the test," Hamilton...
...their American counterparts. That led some researchers to speculate that too much aspirin may counteract the positive effects of lower doses. In addition, says Boston's Hennekens, the larger U.S. trial was far more conclusive statistically. "If you studied 5,000 doctors," he declares, "you'd have to follow them for 20 years to get the same results." Which report is to be believed? Says Sir Richard: "The truth is probably somewhere in between." In his view, aspirin may help prevent about 25% of heart attacks in healthy individuals...
...Then there'll be a crisis." Somehow Icahn's operation remains efficient despite the increasingly complicated latticework of his investments. Icahn raises money through an array of partnerships bearing such names as Aero Limited, Crane, Pelican and Condor. He changes the titles frequently so that his competitors cannot easily follow his activities in the market. To play, new investors must kick in a minimum of $100 million. But as Icahn told TIME, "No matter how much money they give me to invest, I won't let them look over my shoulder...