Word: smokes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...smoking problem is not a major one, but it is serious enough to warrant action, and this resolution will provide people who are bothered by smoke with a place to go, Ruth M. Milkman '81 said...
Debra L. Cohn '81 submitted the resolution saying the eighty per cent of the freshman class that does not smoke should not have to inhale the irritating and unhealthy smoke of the minority of smokers...
...Smoking should be restricted to where air flow is the least," so the smoke doesn't circulate throughout the Union, Lee C. Rubin '81 said. The present resolution subjects a greater number of non-smokers to smoke, she added...
Quite apart from the unusual step of a press secretary correcting his President, Powell's answer only further confused matters for anyone who has tried to decipher the White House's smoke signals on the economy. Last week Powell again tried. Powell said he had meant that the reaction by reporters to the President's statements about Burns was "overblown" and that it would be an "overreaction" to read into them any conclusion that the two have no differences. Moreover, declared Powell, when Carter said that he and Burns have "never had any disagreements" he meant only...
Salinger's commentaries-on such topics as Carter's foreign policy, the Bert Lance affair, the Concorde furor-are a Franco-American spaghetti of high-minded civics lessons and smoke-filled-room atmospherics. Though he correctly foresaw Carter's troubles over energy legislation, he has blandly described the New York governorship as a major stepping stone to the White House-which it has not been since 1932. French journalists, unaccustomed to Salinger's anecdotal style, dismiss him as a lightweight. "I don't go running to him to find new information," sniffs a leading Paris...