Word: researchers
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...oversaw the establishment of the University Library Council, the senior forum for discussion of library policy and affairs. His efforts have been largely successful; the College system adds another library to its ranks each year. Martin says Bryant has succeeded in relating the library to the Faculty and campus research institutes "in an unparalleled manner. He brings to the University an identity and a sense of awareness," Martin adds. "But most of all, he has an understanding of cooperation and coordination--he was a unifying element." Staff members from secretaries in the personnel office to full-fledged branch librarians echo...
...universities would gain little from a ban on intelligence gathering under cover of overseas research. It would neither cause foreign countries to release secrets to American professors which they had not revealed before nor grant them any wider freedom of travel or access. Needless to say, strange research projects sustained by the CIA--such as MK ULTRA--discredit the agency and faculty concerned as do attempts by academics to spy on radical groups on campus. Congress must insist these activities cease immediately...
...Kampala's suburbs with a sharp counterattack, had already moved out of the city to avoid entrapment. One of the first landmarks to fall was the notorious Makindye military police headquarters, where thousands had been tortured and killed by Amin's secret police, the State Research Bureau. Soon afterward, Entebbe Airport was in Tanzanian hands, along with one of Amin's ornate state residences near...
...numbers on oil industry balance sheets are always bogglingly big. In 1978, according to Data Resources Inc., the research firm headed by Democratic Economist Otto Eckstein, the revenues of U.S. domestic and international oil firms totaled a staggering $346 billion; the after-tax profits totaled $15.6 billion, which was more than three times the earnings of all U.S. auto manufacturers. Still, by any yardstick, oil company profits are not out of line with those in other U.S. industries...
Either way, anybody in the business of pleasing a mass audience-which used to be a simple game of playing hunches but is now codified, computerized and constantly tested by market research-can only by stretching the word be considered powerful. A powerful king could do as he damned well pleased; in France, the capricious Louis XIV has been succeeded by the democratic Giscard d'Estaing, who is allowed only to be crotchety. Networks and newspaper chains are far larger than what William Randolph Hearst ruled, but Hearst was a real press lord and his successors are not. Without...