Word: respondents
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Students naturally respond to the economy's needs. The Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, president of Notre Dame, complained last year that "the most popular course on the American college campus is not literature...
...menu included shrimp cocktail and steak, and Bok was careful to insure that meal-time conversation did not stray from social chatter to serious negotiation. Some city councilors complained after the gathering that discussions had been too limited and that University officials would not respond to general questions of policy on broad Harvard-city issues...
White House officials concede that continuing high unemployment (9.8% last month) could darken the rosy Republican hopes. Across the country, political pros of both parties, when asked about the decisive issues in their area, respond with one word: jobs. Some analysts say that if unemployment rises to 10%, the symbolic impact alone might turn ten more House seats over to the Democrats. On the other hand, one of the complexities of this election is the degree to which those hurt by the recession have accepted Reagan's course as painful but necessary. "We don't know what this...
Malin also asks the sticky question of just how Harvard would respond to enforcement of the new law. "What are we supposed to do? Let them drop out? Or replace that money with Harvard money, in which case, it will seem that we are rewarding people for having flouted...
...than most children." Yet it was not until Kam was six that doctors acknowledged that her problem was her hearing. The results of an elaborate series of auditory tests were perplexing. While Kam could hear the sharp sound of a telephone ringing or a door slamming, she did not respond to subtler noises. A standard hearing aid was recommended, but Kam refused to wear it, relying instead on lipreading. Eventually, she graduated from college, married a lawyer from Long Island, N.Y., and resigned herself to being an "audiological enigma...