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

...city for fledgling firms. Last fall, when a group of electronics companies announced plans to launch a joint computer research center that would have an annual budget of up to $100 million, 57 cities in 27 states put in bids to be the new enterprise's home. Bobby Inman, the former CIA deputy director and new head of the operation, last week revealed the winner: Austin. The state of Texas had offered, among other things, to provide Inman's company with low-cost laboratory space at the University of Texas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Economy | 5/30/1983 | See Source »

...attack hardened targets, nuclear strategists assume two missiles per target, which would mean 54 targets for the Pershing Us-too insignificant, in superpower terms, to matter. By contrast, the 1,053 SS-20 warheads can strike virtually all high-value targets in NATO Europe. Retired Admiral Bobby Inman, the former deputy director of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, also brushed aside the Soviet Union's complaints. "You would have some days of preparation and at least hours of readiness for full use of nuclear weapons," he said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Alliance: Trying to Heal the Rift | 5/9/1983 | See Source »

...handwriting is on the wall; even the U.S. cannot save South Africa. Ex-CIA official Admiral Bobby Inman recently acknowledged in a speech at Harvard that the South African government is doomed. As was true in the World War II resistance movements in countries such as France and Yugoslavia, a young radical leadership has emerged within the ANC. And like their European predecessors, the ANC must now make a final, violent bid for victory...

Author: By Errol T. Louis, | Title: Apocalypse, Now | 12/6/1982 | See Source »

...fine wines, tend to improve with age. The competing code system Shamir co-authored at M.I.T. remains, for the moment, uncracked. But the discovery of so basic a flaw in the Stanford scheme is no small matter. When public-key codes first started appearing in scientific journals, Admiral Bobby Inman, then head of the National Security Agency and until recently deputy director of the CIA, worried in public about the Soviets' and other hostile nations' learning to develop uncrackable codes simply by studying published U.S. encryption work. But that fear may lave been misdirected: on the contrary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: Opening the Trapdoor Knapsack | 10/25/1982 | See Source »

...reasons for Inman's current optimists is a recent National Academy of Sciences report which suggested a compromise between an open-flow of information and some voluntary restrictions...

Author: By John D. Solomon, | Title: Ex-CIA Official Forsees New Government-Science Links | 10/22/1982 | See Source »

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