Word: stuarts
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...into Elaine wandering glassy-eyed behind Lowell House. Elaine had, two days before, decided to rewrite 60 pages of her thesis. She was trying to write a government thesis for the History Department, and her adviser knew nothing about her topic, Elaine told Heather that she had frantically begged Stuart, a junior and a born editor, to look over her thesis, and that, of course. Stuart had eaten up the attention. That night, in fact, he pored over Elaine's first draft for hours. When he took a break, it was to visit Heather and ask how her conclusion...
...changed the subject by asking him to accompany her to Littauer to turn in the last chapter. It was 1 a.m., and she wanted to hand it in to her adviser by early morning. Stuart agreed, but when he returned two hours later, the chapter was still in the typewriter. Dawn was breaking by the time she finished writing and revising, and Stuart was curled up on her couch. Heather nudged him, but he was in a deep sleep and only groaned and turned his head. She covered him with a quilt and walked to Littauer by herself...
...Stuart and Elaine at Brigham's. Flaine had just sent her conclusion to a typist. She was talking in monosyllables, her eves bloodshot and dazed, since the effects of the coffee and speed she'd been downing all weekend were just beginning to wear off. Heather envied her: She had to trudge back to Littauer, and Flaine could go to sleep. Heather would have givern her first-born for six hours of sleep. It was the evening and the morning of the fourth all-nighter...
...BREASTSTROKE 1) Lundquist, Steve American Record S.M.U. 1:55 01 2) Barrett, William U.C.L.A. 1:56 06 3) Higginson, Greg Alabama 1:58 56 200-yd. BUTTERFLY 1) Beardsley, Craig American Record Florida 1:44 15 2) Arvidsson, Par California 1:44 42 3) Stuart, Jeff Arizona 1:45 86 3 METER DIVING 1) Bollinger, Robert Indiana 540 70 2) Meyer, Ronald Arkansas 530 30 3) Abieman, Randalt Iowa 529 05 400-yd. FREESTYLE RELAY 1) U of Texas (Kris Kirchner, Eric Finical, Andy Schmidt, Scott Spann) 2:54 84 2) Auburn 2:54 87 3) U.C.L.A...
Such was the case in 1960 when presidential contenders John Kennedy and Stuart Symington proclaimed a "missile gap" with the Soviet Union and criticized the Eisenhower-Nixon administration's lack of vigilance. Less than three weeks after Kennedy took office, Secretary of Defense McNamara admitted that the "missile gap" was indeed a fictitious one. The New York Times of February 7, 1961 reported that "Kennedy Defense Study Finds No Evidence of 'Missile Gap.'" During the next several years it became clear that there was in fact a gap, but that it was--and always had been--in the United States...