Word: coexistent
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Laxalt is moving swiftly to solve a more immediate problem: how his role would coexist or clash with that of the G.O.P. leadership in Congress. Says Laxalt: "I've made it very clear that I don't want to interfere with the prerogatives of leadership at all. There's no way I can be the point man on legislation...
...pluralistic democracy coexist with a monarch at its head? The answer lies in the constitution, in the division of power, and in the personality of the "king" himself. De Gaulle's Fifth Republic prescribes an almost absolute executive. Disdainful of the "regime of the parties" that stalemated governments of the Third and Fourth Republics, the general reduced the role of the legislative and the judiciary to little more than docile vassals for government directives. The system lacks the checks and balances that were deliberately built into the U.S. system, allowing Giscard to maneuver in ways Jimmy Carter could never hope...
...appreciably less sculptural genius than other Pacific cultures, such as the Maoris or New Hebrideans; but the gaunt, intimidating ferocity of some of the pieces, especially a head woven from vine roots with its mouth outlined in dogs' teeth and its scalp matted with human hair, could coexist with a high order of technical skill. What survived the auto-da-fe in greater quantity was decorative art of lesser iconographic content: not gods, but feather robes, bone or whale-tooth ornaments, and the beautifully carved wooden containers, irregular in their polished silkiness, from which the Hawaiians ate their...
...booms, wrote speeches for candidates, and even helped negotiate a secret agreement that averted an American invasion of Mexico." Such activities, fully documented in Steel's narrative, make for uncomfortable reading in this post-Viet Nam, post-Watergate era. The innocence that allowed Lippmann the working journalist to coexist so easily with Lippmann the powerbroker has probably been lost forever...
...Hebron, where a small Jewish quarter existed until many of its inhabitants were massacred during riots by Palestinian Arabs in 1929. Israeli squatters have taken over one building and are threatening to move into others. But the two communities-4,000 Jews and 50,000 Arabs-seem unable to coexist in peace. TIME Jerusalem Bureau Chief Dean Fischer and Correspondent David Halevy recently visited Hebron. Their report...