Word: address
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...instant caping from clar catme diabet samed so frightening that. Harvard's bigingincal laborities received a South threat. During that year, Cambridgn Mayor Affecd E. Vellucci, who would laternay. "I have always felt that DNA work should not be done in a city of 100,000 people," worked to address public fears. He sponsored debates on the dangers and benefits of genetic engineering and act up a mock laboratory as his Mayor's Marketplace to inform the Cambridge populace about this new science which promised so much power for good and for evil...
Phrases like "focus of evil" and "evil empire" will probably not be heard around the White House for a while. Or so it would seem, judging from a preview of the major foreign policy address on the Soviet Union that President Reagan is scheduled to make early this week. Whatever the President might have said about the Kremlin in the past, he has decided to call a truce in the war of words that has sent superpower relations plummeting to the lowest point in two decades. Instead, Reagan intends to steer a course, in his words, of "credible deterrence...
...coffers, depleted only six months ago, are newly flush with an expected $205 million surplus this year, and nearly $1 billion projected for the next. Bolstered by cash and a record public-approval rating of 76%, Deukmejian took a bold conciliatory step in his State of the State address to the legislature the morning after the dinner. He presented a $30.3 billion spending plan that was so comprehensive and popular that even his toughest Democratic detractors clapped...
Though both sides are worn down, the fighting drags on. South Africa still refuses to acknowledge, let alone encounter, spokesmen from SWAPO. Even if cease-fire talks could take place, they would not address the trickiest issue in the whole equation: the Cubans. For a breakthrough to occur, says a U.S. diplomat, "there would have to be an awful lot of common sense and logic. So far that has not been the case...
...railway-station explosion occurred, perhaps not coincidentally, as President Francois Mitterrand delivered his annual New Year's address on national TV. But the President showed no signs of flinching. "In Lebanon, where we are doing our job," asserted Mitterrand, "they depend on us to save human lives. Once the mission is complete, our soldiers will come back here." That unequivocal affirmation apparently created more tension than it defused. On the following day, a bomb shattered the French Cultural Center in the northern Lebanese town of Tripoli...