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Answer for the clue "United States economist noted as a proponent of monetarism and for his opposition to government intervention in the economy (born 1912) ", 8 letters:
friedman

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Word definitions for friedman in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Friedman and Freedman are surname. They may also refer to: Friedman Memorial Airport , public airport in Hailey, Idaho Friedman (unit) , a neologism named after columnist Thomas L. Friedman

Usage examples of friedman.

Friedman kept assuring her they were fine, and when Sylvia finally saw the oldfashioned bassinette Bess had chosen tufted in white satin and trimmed with tiny blue bows she became as excited as her mother-in-law.

Though Friedman was in most circumstances a man far from imaginative, the irony of the Chanukah blessing struck him with almost physical force.

Herbert Yardley may be the best known cryptologist, uncontestably the greatest is William Frederick Friedman.

Joerg Weiss, Richard Pavonarius, Stephen Drury, Matthew Danis, Reilly Beacom, Michael Mayfield, Steven Shouse, Lewis Minteer, Michael Romeo, Peter Diamond, Albert West, Michael Coaty, Dennis Faust, William Midyette, Mark Friedman, Patrick Stevenson, Roger Bass, Bruce Press, Chris Anderson, Patrick Ainge, Steve Johnson, Joel Lipton, Thomas Kier, Michael J Garcia, Dane Summers, Martin Kardon, Steve Rollins, Michael Clark, Brad Callaway, Jerry Scullion, Robert Fink, David Eaton, Dwight Illk, Len Humbird, Andrew T.

As he looked out toward the audience in the Friedman Auditorium, named after his former boss, his mind no doubt skipped back in time, back to that hot, sticky, June afternoon in 1930 when he walked into the dim vault, dressed in his white suede shoes and blue serge jacket, and first learned the secrets of the Black Chamber.

Each agent had his own key, but Friedman had no trouble in solving them.

Standing in the vault containing the salvaged records of the old Black Chamber, Friedman told his three assistants, fresh out of college, that they were now the new Black Chamber.

Manny Friedman sniffed, and then took out a crisp white handkerchief and blew his nose like the second bassoon in the Boston Pops.

Friedman was commiserating with me, and to tell you the truth, I was beginning to feel more sorry for him.

Friedman, Chief Cryptanalyst of the Army Signal Corps, a team of codebreakers had solved Japan's enciphered dispatches, deduced the nature of the mechanism that would effect those letter transformations, and painstakingly built up an apparatus that cryptographically duplicated the Japanese machine.

Friedman thought that the manuscript represents a text in an artificial language that has divided all existence into categories, assigned each a basic symbol, and indicated subclasses by additional symbols tacked onto the first.

Friedman, placed him on board the stage for Eastport, a small town at the foot of Colbert's Shoals, about thirty miles below Tuscumbia.

One of the flower girls was Miss Storm Friedman, aged four, who wore an exact replica of her mother's dress.

For the first time in cryptology, Friedman treated a frequency distribution as an entity, as a curve whose several points were causally related, not as just a collection of individual letters that happen to stand in a certain order for noncausal (historical) reasons, and to this curve he applied statistical concepts.

Three hours after Friedman received the cryptograms, their plaintexts were being cabled to London.