Word: arduously
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...fascist invasion. Having restored their national economy in the shortest possible time, the Soviet people did what would have seemed the impossible. But the fact remains that after the Revolution we were forced to spend almost two decades, if not more, on wars and reconstruction. Under those arduous conditions, using our system's potential, we have succeeded in making the Soviet Union a major world power. This has attested to the strength and the immense capabilities of socialism...
...attorneys and we conceded minor errors in the piece at the start of the trial. We regret them and have said so many times. They came to light only after publication of the article, through the long and arduous process of pre-trial discovery and deposition. Our position in and out of court was that despite them, the article was "substantially true" and that the errors were neither intentional nor published with reckless disregard for the truth. In this we have asked to be upheld by the court. Michael C. Janeway '62 Editors The Boston Globe
...most the graduate experience less arduous, the Strauch Committee recommended that graduate students be affiliated with undergraduate. House on an experimental, non-residential basis. The committee also called on the University to make more campus and to construct additional housing if possible...
...Iowa sojourn had anything to do with 1988, Kemp replied, "Absolutely." Bush is more coy. "I don't seriously have to address that problem until after the 1986 elections," he said last week. Yet the nomination clock is ticking earlier than ever. Michigan, for example, may begin the arduous process of choosing the people who will select its delegates to the 1988 Republican Convention as soon as August...
...latest immigrants are following an arduous and traditional path into American society. Throughout the country's history, groups of newcomers have tended to cluster in certain jobs and then dominate their chosen fields by long and hard work. "This is a very common, recurrent phenomenon," says Harvard Sociologist Daniel Bell. German arrivals with names like Schlitz, Busch and Miller became beermakers in the mid-19th century, for example, while Italians grew fruits and vegetables and produced wine...