Word: parts
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Campaign Manager Susan Estrich, 35, is likely to be part of any Administration. A former Harvard Law Review president and Supreme Court clerk who is on leave as a professor at the law school, Estrich took over the campaign during the turmoil after John Sasso's resignation. Another 35-year- old Harvard Law School professor, Christopher Edley, has done an outstanding job as the campaign's issues director. The top-ranking black on the Governor's team, Edley could wind up as chief domestic-policy adviser. Standing in the wings is Sasso, the mastermind of the campaign, who left after...
...married John Chaffetz, who was in the Air Force ROTC, and moved to California. Their union did not last: they divorced when their son John was three years old. Kitty then rented a small apartment in Cambridge, Mass., for herself and her son and began attending Lesley College part time...
Like a growing number of his countrymen, Duarte blames the Sandinistas' prefabricated revolutionary socialism for many of Nicaragua's economic woes. He turns to baseball, a game made popular in Nicaragua by U.S. Marines in the early part of the century, to explain what he feels needs to happen. "What do you do when a pitcher is getting hit out of the ball park?" he asks. "You change him and try someone with a fresh...
...part, the Soviet Union moved boldly to expand joint ventures with the West in 1987. For the first time in more than half a century, Western companies are now permitted to own up to 49% of a Soviet enterprise. Foreign corporations have set up more than 35 such ventures...
...seeking a Soviet partner to make its snacks and cookies, and wants to market its cigarettes as well. Illinois-based Archer Daniels Midland, a longtime exporter of grain to the Soviet Union, hopes to produce vegetable oils, starches and sweeteners with a Soviet partner. The company may also take part in a Soviet plan to increase the annual production of chickens from the current 500 million to 5 billion by the early 1990s. Starting next June, the growing legion of Soviet personal-computer users will be able to catch up on everything from software to peripherals in a new quarterly...