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Word: parker (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...Harry Parker, Harvard's varsity crew coach has been selected to coach part of the men's U.S. Olympic crew team...

Author: By Christopher J. Georges, | Title: Sudduth Makes the Team; Rower Goes to Olympics | 6/29/1984 | See Source »

FROM THE TOP FLOOR of the Parker House one evening last month, Boston looked placid. Seen from that angle, the just budding green of the Common was painted brightly against the John Hancock lower. If you'd looked out over downtown that night, you might well have thought yourself in a windy city of brotherly love...

Author: By Jonathan S. Sapers, | Title: Keeping Watch | 6/4/1984 | See Source »

After a year, Parker left for Tokyo, where he produced shows and movies (he is now a businessman there), and Shirley came on visits. Their daughter, Stephanie Sachiko, was born in 1956. According to MacLaine, she and Parker had an understanding that each was free to have other relationships; indeed, for a time in the '70s, she tried "promiscuity-sex for sex's sake-because I believed it would be liberating for women, who had been subjected to a double standard. But there was just not enough communication." MacLaine "gradually came to think of Steve...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Best Year Of Her Lives | 5/14/1984 | See Source »

...absence of specific federal laws aimed at computer criminals, nearly two dozen states have passed a series of conflicting and ineffective statutes. "It's a terrible patchwork of law," says Donn Parker, a computer-crime expert at SRI International. "Sometimes the results have been disastrous." According to a recent estimate, only one in 33 reported computer crimes results in a conviction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: Cracking Down | 5/14/1984 | See Source »

Even when they can be traced, computer trespassing and data theft are particularly difficult to prosecute. Most states have no specific laws against breaking into computers via telephone lines or even deleting information stored within the machines. Says SRI's Parker: "If someone merely gained access to a computer and you could not prove malicious intent, he probably would not be prosecuted." Laws written years ago to deal with tangible property do not cover cases in which information is stolen from a computer data base, copied and then returned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: Cracking Down | 5/14/1984 | See Source »

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