Word: warnings
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Dates: during 1980-1980
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...began reshuffling its direct-mail listings for 1982. The arch-conservatives have claimed a healthy share of the credit for the GOP victory and now promise to redouble their assault on all liberals. Anyone left of Kemp-Roth, be he Democrat or Republican, had better head for cover, they warn...
...management at Zap Zap raceways may warn against collisions, but some toy manufacturers are hep enough to know that its the six-car fatals that keep them buying newspapers. Hot Wheels, which at the height of its popularity sold an Interstate-Highway's worth of orange track annually, offers the Criss Cross track, which should be an easy concept to figure...
...none of them are swimming. Life lines mark out the "legal swimming area" in which the water is never more than chest deep. Only a few of the more adventurous men actually swim; most cling to floats or the lines and splash about. Our swimming draws stares; the lifeguards warn us that it is dangerous to go out too deep and then asks us if we have any Taiwanese girlfriends yet. He speaks only the native Taiwanese language and very little English so our conversation is stilted, but he does manage to tell us that native Taiwanese swim better than...
...rule; for example, detained persons must be given a quick hearing before a three-person panel. When Parliament reconvenes this week, Mrs. Gandhi will seek its formal approval of the law, which was imposed by executive fiat. During what is expected to be a bitter debate, opposition members will warn that, once again, Mrs. Gandhi is taking her country down the road to authoritarianism...
...cost of living make judicial salaries look more than adequate to many Americans, especially away from the big cities where private lawyers' six-figure salaries provide a perspective. One congressional aide expresses this "rural factor" by saying: "In Montana, $60,000 still goes a long way." Others warn that a judiciary that is too well rewarded loses touch with the society it is serving. Two recent vacancies on the D.C. Court of Appeals attracted a pool of more than 90 applicants, many of them highly qualified, and even Harold Tyler admits that the quality of the federal judiciary...