Word: interpreting
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RESIDENCY REQUIREMENT. For most women, however, obstacles are still abundant. Thirty-three states retain century-old laws making abortion a crime unless performed to save the life or, in a few instances, protect the health of the pregnant woman. In Utah, some lawyers interpret the law to hold that it may even be a crime to help a woman obtain an abortion elsewhere. Abortions are all but impossible to obtain in such states as New Jersey, Iowa and the Dakotas, difficult at best in Massachusetts, much of the South and Middle West. Women in Idaho, which...
...task of trying to interpret the wage-price freeze fell to the little-known Office of Emergency Preparedness (see box, page 8). The OEP aims to answer all the questions raised by the freeze. But no structure is contemplated that would be remotely similar to that of the Office of Price Administration, which at its peak during World War II included 63,000 paid and over 200,000 volunteer employees. In 1942, one of those OPA employees was a young lawyer named Richard Nixon. He stayed just long enough to build an abiding dislike for the ponderous bureaucratic mechanism...
...Klusak's First Invention are impressive enough, but the real "find" here is 15 Prints After Dürer's "Apocalypse" by 35-year-old Lubos Fišer (pronounced Fisher). Read musical episodes for prints, and you have a work that does not so much interpret Dürer, as reflect the austere purity of his graphic...
...draft treaty mentions "the important significance" of the 1925 Geneva Protocol banning the use of gases and bacteriological agents. As it happens, the U.S. never ratified that treaty. The Nixon Administration resubmitted the protocol to the Senate in late 1969, but stated that it did not interpret it to include irritant gases and herbicides. Since this directly contradicted a 1969 United Nations resolution, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee earlier this year asked the Administration to restudy the herbicide and tear gas question. There the matter rests...
THINKING back to the early '60s, Reporter-Researcher Sydnor Vanderschmidt recalls the difficulties that "space journalism" had in getting off the ground: "When the space age began, it seemed that no one was prepared to interpret the developments for a general audience. The scientists used incomprehensible jargon, and a typical reporter's question was 'How in the world does that satellite stay up there?' " Since then, Syd observes, "newsmen have acquainted themselves with orbital mechanics, and the scientists have finally learned to speak English...