Word: wide
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...toss-right and was supposed to go out wide," Glatz said. "It happened so fast. I didn't happen to see a hole on the outside because the hole was inside. The defense overran the play and the hole was big. I was so surprised...
...harped on in Congress--in a speech with Stanford President Donald M. Kennedy '52 in Los Angeles. In his remarks, Bok took aim at the Reagan Administration for neglecting long-term spending for university research and facilities. Only with such aid, Bok said, could universities keep pace with world-wide research and take a larger role in improving American economic competitiveness...
...University is spending much of its time forwarding its view of relations with the government, Harvard is also re-evaluating its ties to industry. A report on the ethical implications of closer University-industry ties is due out later this week, and Harvard officials are kicking off a wide-ranging study of the relationships different research schools across the country have with corporations. As with its thinking on government ties, the University is expected to call for closer cooperation with industry to address the problem of the American economy...
Shattuck and Spence enlarged the scope of the 1985 report to chart the actions of different federal bodies using a variety of dissimilar laws as part of a government-wide trend toward more secrecy. Agencies ranging from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to the Department of Defense (DOD) to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) have used legislation as different as the Paperwork Reduction Act and the Export Control Act to restrict the flow of information, the authors...
...since 1980, when TIME devoted a special issue to the Soviet Union, has the magazine attempted such a wide-ranging look at Soviet life as in this week's cover package. Says Picture Editor Arnold Drapkin, who spent four weeks in Moscow serving as director of photography for the book project: "These are extraordinary photos of ordinary events." Assistant Art Director Arthur Hochstein designed the special section, while Staff Writer Howard Chua-Eoan provided the captions. Senior Writer Roger Rosenblatt, who contributed the accompanying ten-page essay, spent a month in the Soviet Union on the project. Contrasting his assignment...