Word: interlocking
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...Fundamentally there is in fact a very close fit--a critical interlock--between the structures and processes of the Internet and the main structures and processes of university teaching and learning," Rudenstine told the Sanders Theatre audience...
...People who do theater rarely get into the art museums. Artists also rarely get into the theaters," Symonds said, "All of these threads should interlock...
Jonathon P. Schwartz, director of Interlock Media Associates, points to more reasons for filmmakers affinity for Cambridge. The city is "quasi-left, progressive, alternative, somewhat tolerant," he says...
Intended as an alternative to jail terms and suspended licenses for drunk drivers, the locks have mouthpieces into which drivers must exhale to measure their breath-alcohol level. The manufacturers, Guardian Interlock Systems of Denver and Safety Interlock of Carmel, Calif., claim that built-in safeguards make it difficult for drivers to use compressed air or borrow a breath of fresh air from a friend. One unsolved problem: how to prevent a tipsy driver from borrowing a car that has not been drunkproofed...
There are several reasons, which interlock. One was the postwar baby boom, whose mass, having moved through the art schools like an antelope through a python, arrived in the art world at the end of the '70s. American art teaching swelled in the '60s and '70s. Every university had to have its art department, and that department had to be full. The National Association of Schools of Art and Design guesses that about 900 institutions offer fine-arts degree programs; its own 138 member schools had 45,000 students in the fall of 1982, of whom some 8,500 graduated...