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Word: jeffs (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...only goal of the game. Striker John Catliff, located about 20 yards out' on the left side of the pitch, passed into the goal area to the waiting feet of midfielder Paul Nicholas, who faked the drawers off a Yale defender and put the ball past Yale 'keeper Jeff Duback...

Author: By Kevin Carter, | Title: Booters Blank Bulldogs In Season Home Finale | 11/17/1984 | See Source »

...user. Much of the security here, although exhaustively reviewed and debated by experts, is just common sense: "good" passwords (i.e. imaginative words that prowlers will have a difficult time guessing), frequent password changes, and constant monitoring of computer users. "The lay thing to implementing the systems," says Jeff Gibson director of Security at Digital Equipment Company. "If people don't change the passwords then if a computer manufacturer is making xyz's and every xyz has a password of 'hello' and someone knows he's talking to an xyz than he can gain entry," he adds. "The biggest single problem...

Author: By Robert M. Neer, | Title: Data of Tap | 11/15/1984 | See Source »

Quarterback Gary Vura handed off for a two-yard gain on the next play. On third and nine he dropped back and fired a strike to tight end Jeff Shultie for a 12-yard pickup and a first down on the Harvard...

Author: By Bob Cunha, | Title: After One Quarter, It's 10-0 | 11/6/1984 | See Source »

...summer the same ranchers complain endlessly to Madison that "his elk" are grazing on their cattle pastures. In winter they blame him when hungry elk and deer are busting their fences and devouring their haystacks. "It's not that folks don't like Jeff personally," says Herb Hughley, who operates the Valley Motel on Highway 13, which runs through Meeker. "But they don't like bureaucrats in Denver making laws about what they can and cannot do here...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Colorado: Herds and Hostility | 11/5/1984 | See Source »

Nowhere are price hikes more ominous than in the supermarket. In Topeka, Kans., Schoolteachers Jeff and Chris Templin are grimly familiar with sticker shock at the grocery store. With three children in their family, the high food prices have forced them to cut back on other purchases to make ends meet. Says Jeff, 33: "We can't seem to keep food expenses as low as $60 or $70 a week, and that is without unnecessary sweets and with a lot of chopped beef on toast. We don't go out to eat very often any more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sticker Shock Never Stops | 11/5/1984 | See Source »

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