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Word: implementation (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...result of the referendum on the Dowling proposal should be decisive in determining whether or not the Faculty and administration decide to implement the proposal. If it is approved, students will later vote on whether to ratify the constitution of the new Student Council. There will be a forum to discuss the Dowling proposal Sunday, April 19 at 7:30 p.m. in Science Center...

Author: By Ross Boylan, Andrew Hermann, Peter Ohtaki, Sharon Orr, and Natasha Pearl, S | Title: $60,000 for What? | 4/16/1981 | See Source »

...duplicated efforts on some issues, other issues of vital interest and impact are deliberately overlooked by the administration. An alternative meal plan, a convenient option provided by most other colleges, has been repeatedly proposed by students, yet never has been seriously considered by those with the power to implement...

Author: By Ross Boylan, Andrew Hermann, Peter Ohtaki, Sharon Orr, and Natasha Pearl, S | Title: $60,000 for What? | 4/16/1981 | See Source »

...making alterations. The referendum allows students only two choices: either they support the Dowling proposal in its entire unantendative form or reject it. We must ask ourselves whether the Dowling Committee is the best possible reorganization students can achieve. If not, voting No is the only way to implement changes in the proposal...

Author: By Henry Park and Sesha Pratap, S | Title: A Student Government That Won't Represent You | 4/16/1981 | See Source »

...State Board of Education last Tuesday approved the final phase of Cambridge's school desegregation plan--including a controversial minority staffing clause--enabling the city to begin looking for funds to help implement the plan...

Author: By George P. Bayliss, | Title: State Board Approves Plans For City School Desegregation | 3/31/1981 | See Source »

With every new nuclear weapons program, whether intended to implement a limited-war policy or a counterforce strategy, our security is actually diminished. No Pentagon official could claim that 35 years of nuclear weapons programs have made us any more secure than we were after the world's only two atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The nuclear arms race and the destabilizing nature of the latest generation of nuclear weapons has only brought us closer to disaster...

Author: By Matthew Evangelista, Tim Gardner, and Murray Gold, S | Title: MILITARY SPENDING: | 3/19/1981 | See Source »

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