Word: cautiously
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...repeatedly returned to this theme after Nixon fired Archibald Cox last October. While other commentators demanded impeachment, and even the cautious Times called for Nixon's resignation, Reston worried about the anniversary celebration: "The issue is no longer of the Watergate tapes, or the Middle East, or even of the President, but the leadership of the Republic and the trust of the American people on the 200th anniversary of the nation on July 4, 1976, and between now and Jan. 20, 1977" (Oct. 28, 1973 column...
Schlesinger sees no contradiction in the U.S.'s arming itself with new weapons at the same time that it seeks to disarm through agreement with Moscow. Russia, he says, "is still a totalitarian state" and must be dealt with "in a cautious process." He further explains: "It is necessary for the U.S. to participate in the maintenance of a worldwide equilibrium of forces, and this requires the American people to do what to some seems to be inconsistent: to pursue detente?an alleviation of political tensions?and to maintain an adequate defense capability. We want to have a relaxation...
...they don't show a difference I still don't condone what Kiely did," she said. "But we want to set an example so that professors will be more cautious in what they're revealing and not just hope that everyone finds...
...victim of a premature publicity buildup and her own inexperience, Sally had also an unfortunate style: she picked over the news as if she could not decide which fork to use. She will join the New York Times's Washington bureau in March. Miss Quinn, 32, was cautious about plans to marry her former boss, Washington Post Executive Editor Ben Bradlee, 52. "That's open to a great deal of speculation," said Sally, about that fork in the future...
...slowly anyway," he recruited readers from old P.M. and New York Compass subscription lists rather than attempt to mount an advertising campaign. Stone said in 1971 that he had figured only the paper's quality could sustain it, so he adopted a sober typography and straightforward tone. After eight cautious printers refused to help Stone publish his newsletter, he found two men who would. I.F. Stone's Weekly debuted...