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...final document outlined specific steps that the seven nations agreed to apply against the governments of states that sponsor terrorism, singling out Libya. The accord includes limits on the size of diplomatic delegations, more stringent extradition arrangements and refusal to permit entry of any person expelled from another country for terrorist activities. At his Tokyo press conference, Reagan implied that the agreement actually went further. "We didn't think it was perhaps useful," he said, "to put all of that into a public statement telling terrorists exactly what it was we intended to do." Shultz, ordinarily Buddha-like, was downright...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Summit of Substance | 5/19/1986 | See Source »

...Senate and 356 to 62 in the House were considerably wider than the two-thirds majority necessary to override a presidential veto. Nonetheless, Reagan immediately vowed that he would not only veto the congressional action but would also twist enough arms to prevent an override and permit the sale to go through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stinging Rebuff for the Saudis | 5/19/1986 | See Source »

...specimens were first taken to the Nova Scotia Museum. Grantham, who said he embodies "the entire geological staff" of the museum, did not apply for a permit required to export "cultural" material. He said he had not known one was required...

Author: By Stacie A. Lipp, | Title: Dinosaur Digger Unearths `Fossilgate' | 5/14/1986 | See Source »

...Fossilgate" controversy is rapidly nearing extinction, because Grantham received the permit before Nunziata raised the issue in Parliament. Harvard and the Nova Scotia Museum are currently deciding the final home of the fossils, Shubin said...

Author: By Stacie A. Lipp, | Title: Dinosaur Digger Unearths `Fossilgate' | 5/14/1986 | See Source »

Uniformed ROTC students first reappeared on campus in late 1975, when Steven A. Peck '79, Charles DePriest '77 and Theodore S. Block '77 petitioned the Faculty to permit them to crossregister at MIT's ROTC program. Since the ROTC courses would be non-credit, the three undergraduates wished to pursue their military training as an extracurricular activity, and thus bypass the academic objections lodged against ROTC...

Author: By John C. Yoo, | Title: The Return of the Military | 5/12/1986 | See Source »

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