Word: cherished
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...specter of Viet Nam loomed, by omission, in an otherwise highly effective television speech Nixon had made earlier from the Great Kremlin Palace to the Russian people. "We, like you, are an open, natural and friendly people," he said. Americans "cherish personal liberty" and "would fight to defend it if necessary as we have done before." Yet, "however much we like our own system for ourselves, we have no desire to impose it on anyone else." Appealing for "a world free of fear," Nixon drew tears from some listeners by recalling the words of Tanya, a Russian girl whose entire...
...with "Jumping Jack Flash," Beggar's Banquet, and "Honky Tonk Women." A Stones fanatic can only hope they'll pull themselves together after this current minor fiasco and prove once more that they are indeed the world's finest and most durable rock and roll band. I still cherish my collection of Stones records somewhat more than my Harvard diploma, and until they put out another good one. I'll just have to content myself with all that great dopey stuff on the AM radio...
Instead, Three Thirty Six presents what it calls "News Flashes" that summarily feature Daniel Ellsberg, Larry Dicara, B.F. Skinner (complete with University News Office photo), the New Hampshire Primaries, Richard Herrnstein, and Misha Petkavich. Along the way, Three Thirty Six reminds us that "Most of us cherish the idea of free will," that "New Hampshire voters like to be wooed," and that students "have given up protest because it is just not as much fun as blowing weed and making love." Darling, shall we join the action against the JFK Building tomorrow? Oh no, dearest, I'd much prefer...
...While gold cannot realistically be dropped completely as a form of money because too many people cherish it, its role should diminish, and it should be gradually replaced by the IMF Special Drawing Rights ("paper gold...
Land's stockholders may have to cherish their more intangible rewards for some time. Although Polaroid's first-quarter profits grew by a healthy 17% over those of 1971, Treasurer Harvey Thayer has predicted that the rest of 1972 will be a "lean year," partly because of the huge sums of cash required for production of the new camera. Yet Land, who literally invented the $540 million instant-photography market, displayed profound confidence in his latest product. "Our camera is intellectually complicated and operationally simple," he said. "All you have to do to have the picture...