Word: punished
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...camera caught him on one of the December visits, but agents were unable to identify him until March. The FBI then alerted the Air Force security branch, which arrested Cooke after his May contact with the Soviets. His Air Force superiors evidently reasoned that it was less important to punish him than to find out what, if any, secrets he had divulged. So they offered him immunity from prosecution in return for his full story...
...like to run, it makes me feel horrible" Marc Chapus, the co-captain of both the men's indoor and outdoor track team, says. "I punish my body to make it perform, and it lets me know it. I practice hard and push my body to the brink, after a meet in which I run in two or more single events I'm exhausted and run a 103 degree fever the next day, plus I ache all over...
...compelled to record and disclose anything that might be construed as a bribe. The FBI and CIA were restricted, especially with respect to wiretaps. The only move toward greater secrecy was a restriction on Government access to taxpayer records, because President Nixon had used IRS audits and prosecutions to punish dissent...
Even as it sought to punish those who had helped bring on Poland's economic woes, the government pressed its campaign abroad to gain the financial elbow room required for recovery. Some relief came last week when representatives of 15 Western governments meeting in Paris agreed to postpone until 1986 $2.6 billion in debt repayments due this year...
There may now be some rich alumni so upset at gradual divestment or at liberal students that they will refuse to contribute. That too would be an irresponsible action to punish the entire University community because of particular policies the Corporation espouses. In the long run, single-issue billfold politics--of any perspective--only hurt the students and diminish the University...