Word: developement
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Walter Heller: "Now that the initial euphoria is wearing off, the country is rightfully saying, That was great for openers, but where do we go from here?' After the 90-day freeze, do we slide into a straitjacket of mandatory controls, or do we use this time to develop a set of noninflationary ground rules and a wage-price review board to monitor them?" Echoes Robert Nathan: "If the Administration's leaders are tough enough, we'll get a good incomes policy and a wage-price board. But I don't know if they...
...that Moscow ought to take "the statements about Washington's peace-loving intentions and good will seriously" only if they are combined with U.S. accommodation on Viet Nam, the Middle East, the arms race and the European security treaty. Arbatov reached a semipessimistic conclusion suggesting that "events will develop in another direction," with U.S. policy unchanged on everything except China. All this seemed to place too much of the burden of accommodation on the U.S. Nevertheless, the article seemed in some ways to constitute a plea for U.S.-Soviet cooperation and a warning against an anti-Soviet coalition between...
...kept alive during its several down cycles largely through the efforts of the Aiken Preparatory School of Aiken, S.C., which uses it to help teach regulation polo. Explains Carlos Concheso, a New York banker and one of the founders of the U.S.B.P.A.: "It's a good way to develop a feel for the fundamentals, especially for the teamwork that is so necessary...
Though a growing number of surgeons are learning how to transplant hearts, the operation seems destined to remain a rarity because donors are scarce and the problem of tissue rejection is still unsolved. Therefore, researchers have been working for more than a decade to develop an implantable artificial heart. Last week, Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz, the surgical pioneer who performed the first heart transplant in the U.S., moved the effort a significant step forward. In Detroit's Sinai Hospital, he put an artificial heart booster into the chest of Haskell Shanks, 63, whose heart was so weakened that it could...
...think we've gone hog wild in putting all our hopes on White House leadership. We have to develop other sources of drive and imagination. This is a time of interlocking revolutions. There is a very serious question as to whether our institutions can hold together under the enormous strains of those changes. Somebody has to make them work...