Word: interior
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Concern over pollution is one reason the Santa Maria basin was not explored sooner. Only since Interior Secretary James Watt took office in January 1981 have oil companies been encouraged to explore aggressively for new reserves in undeveloped areas. Their recent successes have come after the highly publicized and expensive failures at Georges Bank off the Massachusetts shore and the Baltimore Canyon off New Jersey. Experts have known of petroleum deposits in the California basin for years, but ignored them because early tests showed, inaccurately, that the oil was heavy and hard to refine...
...steel-they're making me feel I'm home." Plausible? In London, Thornton Wilder once provoked astonishment by referring to his temporary accommodations as home. How use the hallowed word to refer to a hotel room? Explained Wilder: "A home is not an edifice, but an interior and transportable adjustment." It is surely that, along with all else, as immigrants to the U.S. prove over and again: while they have always embraced their adopted land as home, they have tended to ward off melting into the new place by re-creating elements of the homes left behind. Result...
...clearly states that admission to a class cannot be denied because of access. That does not mean that all buildings must be accessible (although new buildings and extensive interior renovations must include full access) or even that all sections of a class must be accessible. But a student must be able to take any class (s)he wishes in an accessible location. The law states, "A university may not exclude a handicapped student from a specifically requested course offering because it is not offered in an accessible location." In several other clauses, this is extended to other aspects...
...Joseph F. Wolf Award, presented to the outstanding interior lineman- senior offensive guard Mike Corbat...
...ethnic Russian, Dolgikh was born in Ilansky, a Trans-Siberian railway town about 2,000 miles east of Moscow. He is thought to be the son of a former senior official in the Ministry of the Interior. After brief service with the Red Army in World War II, he earned a scientific degree from the Mining and Metallurgy Institute in Irkutsk. Sent to the mining-smelting plant in the northern Siberian city of Norilsk in 1958, he won high marks in the Kremlin for his skill in coordinating industrial development in the severe Arctic environment. Dolgikh was appointed party boss...