Word: bomb
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...nuclear arms race by inventing gunpowder, has also come up with a possible antidote--the doctrine of "no first use"? As President Reagan commences his state visit to the People's Republic of China (PRC), it can be instructive to look at how China has viewed the bomb and reacted to the growing strength of the two nuclear superpowers and, in particular, the Soviet military buildup along its borders...
...everlasting regret, the USSR initially provided assistance to its fledgling ally in this endeavor. However, Khrushchev reneged on a promise to provide China a "sample" A-bomb, according to Beijing which made this charge when presenting its account of the Sino-Soviet schism. Nevertheless, in April 1964, within 15 years of its establishment, the PRC successfully detonated an atomic device...
...film's very sense of artistic symmetry that prevents it from truly involving the audience. While the scenes in the bomb shelter and the brawl in the mens' room offer welcome relief from the repetitious scenes of man meets women there are simply not enough deviations from the dance floor. And even with particularly strong performances by Monica Scattini and Etienne Guichard, there is simply not enough material to justify two hours of flitrations and rebuffs. By the time we reach the 1950s and the invasion of the "doo-wop" thugs in leather jackets, the end is long overdue...
Room 13 in basement of Stoughton Hall received two bomb threats last Monday night. Harvard Police and the Cambridge Fire Department responded to the threats at 9:29 p. m. and 10:13 p.m., but found no bombs...
Reagan accuses Congress ft I f there is to be blame, it properly rests I here in this office and with this President." So said Ronald Reagan last December, in accepting responsibility for the terrorist car-bomb attack on U.S. Marine headquarters in Lebanon that claimed 241 American lives and, ultimately, forced a U.S. withdrawal from Lebanon. Yet last week, on two occasions, the President chose to amend that judgment radically and somewhat petulantly, blaming Congress for the most serious U.S. foreign policy failure of his Administration. Reagan also faulted the Legislative Branch on its performance in other foreign policy...