Word: warded
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...WARD 8, PRECINCT 3WARD 6, PRECINCT 2 WARD 7, PRECINCT 4 WARD 8, PRECINCT 2 WARD 6, PRECINCT 3 Claverly Hall Dunster House Cabot House Yard Dormitories Union Dormitories Eliot House Mather House Currier House Old Leverett Leverett Towers Pforzheimer House Kirkland House DeWolfe Lowell House Adams-Westmorely Quincy House Winthrop House Adams-Randolph Vote at Quincy House Vote at Putnam Vote at the Peabody Vote at Larsen Hall, Vote at Gund Hall, on Plympton St. Apartments at 2 Mt. School on Linnean Graduate School of Graduate School of Auburn St., in the St. Use the Education, on Appian Design...
Free traders need an equally imaginative political strategy to ward off protectionism. Their policy has claimed some real victims, who can no longer be kept quiet by sermons about the greater good of the overall economy. Unfortunately, the sermonizers have been less than prolific with ideas about how to help the losers. The lead idea is retraining, but it would have to be conducted on a scale difficult to finance at a time of pinched federal budgets. The alternative, however, might be a protectionist spirit that keeps reviving, just as Frankenstein's monster kept coming back in movie sequel after...
...deliberately kept in the dark about the bombings so that he could claim ignorance and remain the acceptable face of Irish republicanism. For the moment, Adams is still an important--and perhaps indispensable--part of the peace process. Says Alex Attwood, a Belfast city councilor representing a ward in Roman Catholic West Belfast: "Adams and his first- line managers are the best and the brightest. People may not like them, but they need to be sustained if we are going to secure peace...
...just easier [to use Crimson Cash]," said Jackie B. Ward '99. "You don't have to worry about money...
BILL CLINTON IS IN A TICKLISH SPOT. He needs the Federal Reserve Board to help ward off the threat of a recession that could gravely wound or even kill his re-election bid. But he dare not put any overt pressure on the fiercely independent Fed, or on its Republican-appointed chairman, Alan Greenspan. And though the President has been pointedly silent about whether he will reappoint Greenspan when his term expires March 1, few people in Washington think he would risk dumping him. There would be too much hell to pay in Congress, on Wall Street...