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Word: equalization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Other issues that the CCSR and the ACSR considered include military issues, employment practices in Northern Ireland, charitable contributions, operations in Mexico, forced labor, animal testing, equal employment, third-world debt, drug pricing policy and cigarette advertising...

Author: By Jennifer L. Burns, | Title: Investment Policy Considered | 11/5/1993 | See Source »

...claims Harvey C. Mansfield finds admissible in a court of law: 1. She was wearing pants, so I assumed she was a lesbian. 2. The tenure process is socially unproductive because it does not result in the creation of children. 3. Single mothers do not deserve equal protection under the law--and they have no idea how unhappy they are. 4. The Hostage Crisis coincides with the admission, en masse, of Black students to Harvard. 5. If they kiss, the social order will be destroyed. 6. Prisoners of conscience don't know it, but they actually enjoy incarceration...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mansfield's Top Ten List for a court of Law | 11/5/1993 | See Source »

...former interaction is vastly more complicated and tortuous. The U.S. need no longer have an inferiority complex with respect to Europe, such as was depicted in Mark Twain's The Innocents Abroad or in just about all of Edith Wharton's novels. The U.S. can now stand as an equal with the European nations; indeed, it has come to overshadow them. Latin America has had no such luck. In all sorts of pervasive ways, Latin America still lives with the burden of Europe, and the stories in Strange Pilgrims play with the meaning of that legacy...

Author: By Joel Villasenor-ruiz, | Title: Assured, Meditative Pilgrims Shows New Voyages of Discovery | 11/4/1993 | See Source »

...reaction. During Mulroney's second term, recession hit Canada as hard as it did the United States. If the election had been held two years ago, the Progressive Conservatives would probably still have lost, but by a smaller margin. The fact that their influence was cut by an amount equal to more than half the seats in the House of Commons demonstrates just how dynamic Canadian political opinion...

Author: By Daniel Altman, | Title: A Model of Democratic Change | 11/1/1993 | See Source »

...abortion not only as a rejection of him but as an attempt to will his entire community out of existence. In a test of the boundaries of liberalism, this gay man is unwilling to settle for mere tolerance from heterosexuals: he wants his life accepted as fully equal, and if he cannot have that, he will turn his back on the family he seems so much a part of. His sister may say the decision is hers and her husband's, but the brother compellingly argues that the outcome reflects their deepest feelings about the worth of his kind...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What If Baby Grows Up Gay? | 11/1/1993 | See Source »

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