Word: address
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...hunting associations, and a gift of $30,000 from the National Rifle Association in Washington, D.C. But it also reported receiving, in six installments, a total of $71,000 from a group called the Gun Owners Action League. Strangely enough, the Gun Owners Action League also lists its address as Box 272 at 11 Main Street in Southboro. There may be nothing illegal or even unethical about the arrangement between the Taxpayers Against Question 5 and the Gun Owners Action League. But there is something suspicious about it: in the past, committees like the Action League have been used...
...quality of advice that is given by those who are subject to it, and universities have not, until recent years, paid much attention to try to give not last-minute efforts to ward off regulation, but much earlier, more constructive efforts using their intellectual resources to help the government address important national issues effectively, but in a way that does no needless damage to the health and vitality of universities...
Even so, some 30,000 of Nature's noblemen did shew up on the 4th. of March, the appointed day. I will take the liberty of saying that they were not entirely as Diciplined as my Democratic boosoom could have wished. I clearly recall asking in my Inaugural Address for "the indulgence ... of my fellow-citizens." Scarce an hour had elapsed before I saw verry much more Indulgence than I had anticipated...
...Syrians seem certain to remain in Lebanon much longer than that, even though Sarkis-in his first television address as President last week-spoke of their presence as "temporary." It will take at least two years, by some estimates, merely to rebuild Lebanon's fragmented army and internal security forces. In parts of Lebanon, the Syrians seem to have settled in for a long stay. In the fertile Bekaa Valley, Syrian currency circulates as easily as the Lebanese pound, and shopkeepers routinely do business in either. Arriving there from Damascus, TIME Correspondent Wilton Wynn stopped at a Lebanese checkpoint...
...part of our Bicentennial observance, TIME asked leaders of nations round the world to address the American people through the pages of TIME on how they view the U.S. and what they hope-and expect-from the nation in the years ahead. This message from Premier Süleyman Demirel of Turkey is the eighth in the series...