Word: paperworks
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...publish it for their own career benefit," according to a report in The Chronicic of Higher Education. But Olsson says that, if necessary, the Med School, and presumably other campus facilities, would be able to separate completely those projects undertaken with private funds from other work. "It will entail paperwork and guidelines, and it is something that can be monitored," he explains...
Three Orange County housing workers arrived last Tuesday at the home of Tommy and Mae Rose Owens in Winter Park, Fla., a suburb of Orlando, to complete paperwork on the couple's federal loan for home improvement. But the Owenses were not there. Neither were the house and the yard. They had fallen-along with five expensive foreign cars, a truck, a parking lot, part of a four-lane road and much of a municipal swimming pool-into a sinkhole. That geological oddity resulted when underground limestone caverns, which are usually filled and strengthened by water, were gradually drained...
...been taken off the street "and put behind a desk" in the police station. When Graham said she thought he should have been suspended altogether, Russell Higely, the city's chief legal counsel, said since the officer would have to be paid anyway he "might as well be doing paperwork...
Meese, who likes to lug home a bulging briefcase, concentrates on developing policy positions; Baker, who scorns paperwork, keeps a sharp eye on political affairs; Deaver is the devoted guardian and shaper of Reagan's schedule. Says one aide who has watched them closely: "No one can put himself in the President's shoes, when it comes to personal and many political considerations, the way Deaver can. No one can put himself in the President's mind, when it comes to difficult policy questions, the way Meese...
Actually, the IRS is virtually choked with paperwork; last year alone its overburdened staff and computers received 93,143,000 individual tax returns and 547 million documents. The agency was able to audit only 2.02% of the returns. The 2,267 cases it recommended for criminal prosecution in 1980 represented fewer than three out of every 100,000 individual returns and was well below the number of potential cases that could be brought against tax cheaters. Says former IRS Agent Philip Storrer: "The agency is falling further and further behind in their audits. They don't have a large...