Word: responded
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Some experts now question the use of the strange situation as a measure of adjustment. Children in substitute care are naturally going to respond differently to a series of separations and reunions, says Kathleen McCartney, a developmental psychologist at Harvard and another of Belsky's critics. "Kids in child care go through that every day." Tests measuring a child's energy level and attention span might be a better guide to emotional health...
...stage where you can call him George," says Choreographer Donald Saddler, who has worked with him on many shows and now enjoys that privilege. A few weeks ago, Abbott extended the invitation to Gerald Freedman, artistic director of the Cleveland troupe. The dumbstruck Freedman -- Sir Gerry now -- could only respond, "I'll try, Mr. Abbott...
...Larry and his former roommate Jeffrey R. Chapman '86 ("my collaborator," insists Guterman)--demonstrates more of the same. Sitting in the new Cambridge War Memorial Park, the pair face the requisite, serious kind of interview questions. The two, who co-wrote and co-directed Larry's latest film, politely respond with the requisite, serious kind of interview answers. Except that it was all in mocking tones. Chapman, asked to describe Guterman, replies: "Once in an atomic age a true genius passes through Harvard's gates. Larry encompasses the diversity of Harvard within itself...
...want it," as New York's Dime Savings Bank promises? Or "a real bargain," courtesy of California First? Those are the kinds of advertising claims that are wafting these days around banking's hottest product, the home-equity loan. A boomlet of sorts is under way as customers respond with enthusiasm to this form of consumer debt, while lenders vie frantically for customers and market share. But amid the rush, cautionary voices are warning about the dangers of the popular loans, and the misleading nature of some of the hype. The major worry: that some unwary consumers may be undercutting...
What would happen if Iran hit an American ship or a Kuwaiti one flying the Stars and Stripes? When reporters asked Assistant Secretary of State Richard Murphy how the U.S. would respond, he replied, "Iran would be reluctant to engage the U.S. militarily because of concern over our response." Murphy pointed out that no American ship had been hit in the past and claimed that Iranian officials had assured the Administration that Iran would not strike U.S. vessels. Pressed, however, Murphy admitted, "There is a risk there. We don't deny it." An Iranian attack, he added somewhat ominously, "would...