Word: windowful
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While Schatz raised himself through the Mercedes' sunroof to keep a weather eye, Nicholson walked toward a Soviet tank shed, intending to take photographs through a window. At 3:50 p.m., according to Schatz, a Soviet sentry suddenly appeared from a wooded patch about 100 yards from the men. "Watch out!" shouted Schatz. "Come back!" Without warning, American officials charge, the sentry fired three quick rounds from his AK-47 assault rifle. One of them whistled by Schatz's ear, a second went wide, and the third tore through Nicholson's chest as he turned. "I've been shot, Jess...
Atlanta Reporter Leslie Cauley, who talked to state police officials and judges in Georgia and South Carolina, learned last December how even a minor incident could affect her. Returning to her car one night, she found the window vent broken and the glove compartment rifled. Angry, she headed home. "I was on the interstate when it hit me. I started to shake as I considered what might have happened if I had come upon my thief. In my anger, what would I have done? And what, in his desperation, would he have done...
Yesterday's rally, which attracted about as many onlookers as many onlookers as, ended with the demonstrators walking to Bok's office window and repeating their Monday chant, "Hey, hey, ho, ho, there's blood on your portfolio...
Many Ohioans, including the Governor, admit that until now they never paid much attention to the fact that some thrifts were not insured by the U.S. Government. The privately insured S and Ls wear window decals that look as authoritative as the FSLIC symbols, but the thrifts are often not subject to the same degree of oversight as institutions that are insured by Uncle Sam. Some Ohio thrifts may not have sought Government protection because they wanted to avoid the paperwork and scrutiny that comes with U.S. insurance. Ducking the expense of complying with federal regulations may have helped institutions...
...Administration, which decried what it saw as a "window of vulnerability" in U.S. missile power before it took office in 1981, contends that the Minuteman silos can be "hardened" with additional concrete. But whether they would be strong enough even then is doubtful. In an attempt to defuse the issue, Air Force General Bennie Davis, commander of the Strategic Air Command, vainly sought to convince a congressional subcommittee three weeks ago that the "window" expression was shorthand not for silo exposure but for overall strategic inferiority...