Word: affected
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...energy expert, he wired his findings to Associate Editor David Tinnin, who wrote the cover story. Though Schlesinger and his staffers are still hard at work on final details, the result of Sider's probings is, we think, the most thorough preview yet of a program that will affect every American-and indeed the very future...
...recent construction of two parking lots by the Cambridge City Hospital helped alleviate the problem, Richards said. Hospital employees have first priority to use the spaces, he said. The lots do not affect parking during the afternoon and early evening...
...NLRB overruled both these objections. The board said that the number of faculty members outside the country was not enough to affect the results. It added that the faculty members were sophisticated enough to be able to separate fact from opinion regarding Silber's conduct...
...United States: first neglect, then paranoid fear. Echeverria's outspoken nationalism and his attempts to lead the Third World in international forums was not given much importance in the first years of his term. Americans perceived this nationalism as a product for domestic consumption which would not affect their interests. Moreover, the first three years of Echeverria's presidency were characterized by multiple contradictions, so that few Mexicans, and many fewer Americans, knew what Mexico's position was on any subject. Within a few weeks Echeverria went from a position of rejecting any form of birth control program--even going...
Many in Mexico have seen Lopez Portillo's position as a selling-out to American imperialism. Rather, it is a very realistic approach to the problem of North-South relations. We have problems, and our problems affect the rich. Imperialism and interventionalism have proved impotent in solving these problems, and simply created time bombs in the underdeveloped world. The solution is, in the words of Lopez Portillo, for the rich to give up their "arrogance, which is easy but sterile" and for the poor to avoid "submission, which is easy but abject." "We have chosen the difficult road of dignity...