Word: commandeered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1980
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...reasonable people," one of Bok's favorite phrases make consensus decisions. "Significant changes," Bok says, "depend on taking into account the views of different groups. It is important not to have a lot of controversy," he continues, because "change only comes when you get a sense of what will command respect and at least give everybody's views an adequate hearing...
...example of the revolving door between the Government and the contractors is the role of Robert Baran, an electronics engineer. In 1978 Baran left his job in Naval Air Systems Command to go with a consulting firm named Science Applications Inc. (SAI), where he worked on projects that he had first suggested at his old job. Eventually, Baran claims, he got $417,000 worth of defense contracts for SAI by what he calls "the judicious use of hyperbole and exaggeration." Baran even admitted to TIME Correspondent Jonathan Beaty: "I did my part to falsify technical data to suit the objective...
Though the two chairmen disagreed on energy policy, both agreed that no new committee should take command of their battlefield. Udall was afraid the new committee would gain control of nuclear safety standards, a responsibility of his subcommittee. Dingell had more reason to worry: his subcommittee was going to be incorporated whole into the new body...
...time is mid-1983. Minutes after early-warning satellites pick up the launching of enemy missiles against the U.S., the Pentagon 's National Military Command Center flashes out the presidential order for a counter strike. The aging squadrons of B-52s from bases in North and South Dakota roar into the air. Later, while flying over North Pole ice sheets approximately 1,500 miles from their objectives, each bomber drops a deadly load of up to 20 cruise missiles. Like oversize model aircraft, these small unmanned jets skim at 500 m.p.h. only 50ft. above the ocean. Finally, hedgehopping their...
...confused and predictable: lame slapstick gags (including the inevitable food fight), sentimental bromides about love, and deadly serious (if inexplicit) sex scenes are thrown together without transitions. Even the heroines' slowly developing friendship is sketchily written; it seems to happen offscreen. While McNichol and O'Neal always command attention, the drama they create has less to do with Little Darlings than with the intriguing vicissitudes of show business careers...