Word: signed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...where the two fours were already gliding along. The rowing was smooth, steady, rhythmic, as the oars skimmed through the water and flipped up, over, back, skim, up, over, back. Broods of ducks, a few sculls, the Boston skyline, the beginnings of rush hour traffic, and a Coca Cola sign that flashed "7:32, 74 degrees," all passed by; the emerging sun sent gold glints off the State House dome...
...been a quiet afternoon in Eliot House, with just a few people hanging out in the courtyard and most apparently napping. Maggie's door had had a sign on it all afternoon that said "Sleeping," but at about 4:10 Harry Parker had knocked on the door and gone in. At about 4:20 he had emerged...
High Feelings. Last month the House of Representatives got into the act by taking the unprecedented-and perhaps unconstitutional-step of voting to withhold any appropriations to pay for further negotiations (TIME, July 21). It was a sign of how high feelings run over the issue, both in Congress and, as Henry Kissinger discovered during his recent domestic forays, across the land. Former Army Secretary Howard Callaway-who is now Gerald Ford's campaign manager-declaimed that: "There's a feeling in this country that Teddy Roosevelt helped the Panamanians get their independence, negotiated the treaty, paid...
...hand, have a vested interest in keeping the competition flourishing because it channels all the aggressions of the population. So there are as many clashes around the race course as on it, enough to keep things moving along at a sprightly pace. Death Race 2000 is, altogether, a cheering sign that the much-lamented B picture is alive and in good health...
...bargain price that was officially subsidized by the U.S. Government. Largely as a result, wheat prices shot from less than $2 to more than $6 per bu., and in the following months other domestic food prices soared. Memories of that disaster caused 33 members of Congress last week to sign a letter calling on the U.S. Government to take over negotiation of all grain sales to the U.S.S.R. But the Soviets have little chance of repeating the 1972 coup: the Department of Agriculture now requires the reporting of all sales that exceed 100,000 tons...