Word: referred
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...quotes of mine saying Jesse Jackson "has no real program" and "doesn't know what he is doing" refer to Jackson's campaign for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination. Of course Jackson has a policy, a specific policy on many issues, but it is not a policy calculated to win him the nomination. Jackson also knows what he is doing as a national leader, but what he is doing is not advancing his chances to be the Democratic candidate. His policies and his campaign are not going to get him nominated. If my quotes have been interpreted...
Both Gould and Repetto say that the support groups also provide a link between students and the official University counseling services. All of the peer groups refer people to UHS and the Bureau when they feel students have a problem which they cannot handle. The process works in reverse as well: the professional counselors sometimes refer students to their peers...
...editorial claims that Bok has made sure that Harvard doesn't invest in companies which don't sign the Sullivan principles." This is incorrect I refer Mr. Howe and the reader to an article in the Crimson dated March 23, "Harvard Tied to Nine Firms Ignoring Sullivan Principles." Harvard owns "more that $140 million in companies operating in South Africa that have not signed or have refused to comply with the Sullivan Principles." This represents more than 25% of Harvard's portfolio Further, the Sullivan Principles, denounced by Black South African leaders as purely cosmetic and a tool...
Rosenthal, 61, laughs triumphantly when people still refer to the Times as "the gray lady of 43rd Street." Since he took over in 1969, the paper has been steadily reshaped, especially with the introduction of daily theme sections (Sports, Science, Living, Home and, for entertainment, Weekend). The sections have opened the paper to stories far beyond conventional news. Some are obscure; some are refreshing reminders that there are other serious pursuits besides politics. The editorial page has also shifted, under Editor Max Frankel, from fussy, civics-textbook pieties to street-smart candor...
...popular. Some software companies put special codes into the programs to prevent illegal duplication, but the codes are frequently broken. When that happens, a copy can be made in a procedure that is not much more complicated than making a duplicate of a cassette tape. Successful copiers like to refer to themselves as "pirates." Complains William ("Trip") Hawkins, 30, founder and president of Electronic Arts, a San Mateo, Calif., firm selling entertainment software: "Calling people pirates is a lot more palatable than calling them what they are-thieves...