Word: supplemental
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...demand for energy in the U.S. and round the world was continuing to grow at an alarming rate. In April 1973 TIME, FORTUNE and SPORTS ILLUSTRATED sponsored a three-day conference at which political, business and environmental leaders were brought together to explore solutions to the problem. The special supplement that appeared in the May 7, 1973 issue of TIME emphasized the crucial and complex role...
This first supplement will concern itself with the historical and theoretical dimensions of super-power imperialism, including some indication of what the future of Vietnam holds in store...
Next month's Dump Truck will supplement this discussion with a review of Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the politics...
...problem, however, is that after bureaucracy reaches a certain size, the chain of command is stretched fairly thin, making it relatively tempting, and often easy, for bureaucrats to forget the source of their authority and to arrogate policy-making authority to themselves as a supplement to their policy-executing duties. This possibility is easiest in those areas of government activity where legislated policy is loosely defined and subject to varying interpretations. It is exacerbated when bureaucracies grow so large and independent as to develop a life of their own, and become more concerned with serving their own prerogatives than with...
Susan doesn't tell Hart she is Kingsfield's daughter. When he finds out, he gets mad. They fight. They make up. They plan a week-end at the Cape, but Hart cancels it to research a supplement for Kingsfield's new book. They fight again--in a supermarket this time. Susan tells Hart that he's taking school too seriously, that he's just chasing a piece of paper, nothing more. Waving a roll of toilet paper, she says his diploma is just another kind of paper, "no different from this...