Word: inked
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...should increase 3% this year, adding $5 billion to manufacturers' revenues. Most airlines report steady gains in the sensitive indicator of intra-European traffic, up more than 9% this year, though all major airlines are expected to lose money once again in 1994, the fifth straight year of red ink. Nowhere is the trend more critical than in Germany, which has long dominated the European economy both in weakness and in health. For the previous 24 months that influence has been negative. Then earlier this month Bonn reported that the West German economy, after its worst recession in 40 years...
Barrels of ink have already been spilled by and about self-described "arch right-winger" Robert K. Wasinger...
...contract with Congressional Quarterly Inc. to provide us with the voting data base. Production director Brian O'Leary and staff painstakingly coordinated the technical and printing efforts that allowed us to trace all our subscribers down to their block and postal route to identify their legislators and then ink-jet those specific records individually onto each of their magazines. Normally, such a procedure takes up to five weeks. We now have it down to 48 hours...
Voters, especially blacks eager to embrace the day of their liberation, were not deterred. The election, astonishingly peaceful, succeeded beyond all preparations. Lines of determined voters stretched a mile and more at polling places. Many polls opened hours late or ran out of ballots or the invisible ink used to mark the hands of those who had already made their choice. The ballots, printed weeks ago, did not include the last entry in the race, the Inkatha Freedom Party, and had to be updated with paste-on stickers; to ensure fairness, Zulu Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi demanded a fourth...
Most copies of this week's issue contain, on the opening page of the Chronicles section, an ambitious experiment in customized printing. With the aid of ink-jet technology and the research services of Congressional Quarterly Inc., we have enabled each individual subscriber in the 50 states to read how his or her U.S. Senators voted in last week's controversial approval of full, four-star retirement for Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Frank B. Kelso 2nd. It is intended as the first of many customized congressional features through which we hope to engage TIME's readers more closely...