Word: keying
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Young men and women of Harvard, a new and beguiling scenario is being written these days in key spots throughout this land. It's called "National Youth Service." Don't buy it. It's a euphemism for the grim and ugly reality of THE DRAFT. If the Pentagon can't figure out how to make a success of its volunteer army, let them give up the war idea altogether. Let unswerving opposition to this so-called Youth Service mark the recrudescence of student activism. Let Harvard lead the way in the cry for NO DRAFT! NO CONSCRIPTION! NO SELECTIVE SERVICE...
...rash of espionage cases followed defection to the West of Lieut. Werner Stiller, a key officer in East Berlin's state security apparatus. Stiller, who was actually a West German agent, identified a number of East German spies working in West Germany. Since his defection, 14 suspects have been arrested, and 18 others have escaped to the East...
...excess of the guidelines would move the Administration to intensify its efforts to deregulate the trucking industry. That would make it easier for new firms to pick up lucrative routes. The trucking companies and drivers fear deregulation because competition may reduce rates, profits and job security. So far, key congressional committees have been cool to deregulation. There are major trucking firms in almost every congressional district, and they can bring much pressure on their legislators...
...thoughts that come to mind?the theory is that his unconscious difficulties will gradually break through into conscious thought. The analyst is generally passive and silent, offering no advice and speaking only to prod the patient into uncovering more nuggets from the inner recesses of the mind. The key to the Freudian "cure" is transference?the analyst replaces some crucial figure in the patient's background, usually a parent?and the patient eventually re-experiences blocked emotions and frees himself of the past...
Steel has been the key money-losing sector. French steel companies, which have been kept going by uneconomic government subsidies, were not prepared for the crisis that resulted from a worldwide decline in demand, accompanied by aggressive competition from Japan and the Third World. While a French worker takes 11.2 hours to produce a ton of steel, the same job is done in Germany in 7.9 hours and in Japan in 5.9 hours. That is partly because French plants have antiquated machinery requiring greater manpower. A more productive steel industry, the Premier argues, "is a matter of survival for France...