Word: dependently
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...were first proposed. The Russians justifiably condemned Carter's initiative then as one-sided. In seeking to curb the Soviets' efforts to turn their stable of intercontinental ballistic missiles into MIRV's (multiple independently-targeted re-entry vehicles), the President proposed the restriction of a system that the Russians depend on heavily, and the U.S. does not. Our ace in the whole, after all, would appear to be the new cruise missile...
...Carter repair the leaks? That could depend on how swiftly, and skillfully, he moves to cut his losses. At week's end Senate Majority Leader Byrd reiterated the advice that he had offered the President on Tuesday. Lance "should have his say before the committee and then resign," said Byrd. He added: "It is inevitable that he will resign." Carter's reply, delivered while campaigning in New Jersey for Governor Brendan Byrne, was ambiguous. "I respect the opinion of people like Senator Byrd," said the President, "but I agree with him that Bert ought to have a chance to explain...
...this point, I really don't want to raise peoples' hopes," Spence said. She added that the number of spaces available in certain Houses would depend on the preferences of the people applying for rooms...
Eddison says HIID "took quite a beating" during the early '70s as the traditional sources of funding for its projects--the Ford Foundation and the U.N. Development Program--began to dry up. Before, host countries could depend on these funding sources for the HIID programs, but today the institute's clients must fund the projects themselves, often with loans on favorable terms from the World Bank and other international lending institutions...
Will the Carter proposals cure America's agricultural indigestion? Like so much else in farming, more may depend on the weather than on complex Government plans involving stockpiles and support prices. If the weather is good, the mountains of soybeans and cereal could be around for a long time. But the weather has a way of turning bad, and those burdensome American surpluses could soon prove to be a blessing to consumers round the world...