Word: itemizes
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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There are some items that we Harvard folk just can't get enough of. The numbers are astounding, maybe even revolting to the weak of tray and the faint of stomach. Who knew we liked burgers so much? Their untouchable status as the most popular item proves the maxim: "When in doubt, do the option." Here are some of the most frequently gobbled items...
...YOUR ITEM "A SNEAK PEEK AT OLIVER Stone's Nixon" [Chronicles, March 20] totally misrepresents the film we are trying to make. I can only imagine the outrage Time's editors would express if someone obtained a very early draft of a cover story you were working on, circulated it publicly and then picked it apart selectively. I don't question your journalistic right to do this to me, but I do question the fairness of taking an early draft of a script that won't even begin shooting for another month and putting your own very twisted spin...
...elected president to change the direction of America," Clinton told the American Society of Newspaper Editors in Dallas. He warned that the GOP had better modify its "Contract With America" proposals if they were to become law. So far, he said, he is inclined to support only the line-item veto and a $16 billion spending cuts package that the Senate passed Thursday night. Senate Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, chosen to respond to Gingrich's speech Friday, added his own pre-emptive strike: "The Republicans will try to impress us with the sheer volume of legislation they've passed, largely...
...Senate voted 69 to 29 to give President Clinton a prerogative he and previous Chief Executives have long desired: a line-item veto over spending legislation. Opponents of the G.O.P.-sponsored measure argued that it gives away too much congressional power and may even be unconstitutional...
...only remaining "Contract With America" proposal to have President Clinton's avowed support, the line-item veto, is ready for quick Senate approval after days of partisan wrangling. (The House version passed last month.) This afternoon, Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole dropped a plan to cut off further debate on the bill, saying he was satisfied that Democrats would quit stalling. Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) made peace by paring 33 threatened Democratic amendments down to about a dozen...