Word: deeming
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...backfire and stiffen British resolve to stick it out. Late last week, the I.R.A., which had previously refused to confirm or deny responsibility for the bombings, virtually admitted its guilt. In a statement addressed to Prime Minister Edward Heath, the Proves warned: "We shall strike when and wherever we deem it necessary...
...because Nixon's statutory authority to regulate prices and wages expires at the end of the month. The White House is seeking a one-year carbon-copy extension of the Economic Stabilization Act, which gave the President blanket permission "to issue such orders and regulations as he may deem appropriate to stabilize" pay and prices. Should Congress simply renew that power, Nixon could obviously proceed with Phase III pretty much as he pleases. But more and more members of the congressional Democratic majority are determined to sprinkle the bill with amendments requiring enforcement of mandatory controls on sections...
...release him because he was 21. Dan Voll, who was seized in New York, has filed an assault charge against Patrick; his lawyer, John LeMoult, argues that most deprogram ming raids involve assault and unlaw ful imprisonment. But since parents are involved, federal officials do not in prac tice deem the abductions kidnaping...
...concedes that "my socialism did not come easily." One of eight children of a railway worker from the southwestern province of Charente, Mitterrand says that in his youth "we talked about Communists as if they were men from Mars." When reproached for his "reactionary past," he replies: "I deem it more honorable to have evolved from right to left than vice versa." In spite of his impoverished beginnings, Mitterrand has gathered degrees in law and political science...
...originally opposed the legislation that authorized his move. Last week, in a step that brings the turn-around full circle, Administration officials announced that they will ask Congress for an extension of the law, which gives the President sweeping powers to "issue such orders and regulations as he may deem appropriate to stabilize prices, rents, wages and salaries," before it expires April 30. Nixon evidently plans to do some reshaping of the anti-inflation program at the same time, though he has not yet decided how much. But Economic Coordinator George Shultz made one thing perfectly clear: any continued controls...