Word: exploitatively
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...early January, when the North Vietnamese said officially that they would agree to discussions if the U.S. stopped bombing North Viet Nam. Washington followed up with a deep probe of Hanoi's intentions. The chief question throughout was whether Hanoi would give assurances that it would not militarily exploit a bombing cessation. This demand was part of the "San Antonio formula" laid down by Lyndon Johnson in September and later denned as meaning that Hanoi should not increase its infiltration rate of South Viet Nam beyond existing levels...
...disdained the spicy suavity of French and Russian music, especially the orchestrations ("A harp in an orchestra is like a hair in the soup"). Yet his sonorous, spontaneous-sounding scores so deftly exploit the personality of individual instruments that they speak like characters in a drama-in fact, they often battle each other. His Clarinet Concerto, for example, is built around an argument between the clarinet and snare drum, with the orchestra kibitzing...
...goals. He also had possession of a U.S. spook ship packed with supersecret gear and if he did not have Lyndon Johnson for burning, he did have the hapless Commander Bucher. Nobody can be certain what happened to Bucher, but the Pyongyang regime was plainly making every effort to exploit him. It was a sad conclusion to Lloyd Bucher's first command...
...strongly endorse Dr. Van Allen's criticism of our Government's regressive attitude toward space exploration [Jan. 5]. One of the reasons for the greatness of the U.S. has been our willingness to explore and then constructively exploit new frontiers. A major portion of this country's future, not for the next few years but for centuries to come, must lie in space. Granted there's a war on, which pressures our economy, but this will pass. I only pray that when my generation takes over we will have the opportunity of maintaining a free space...
...Gaulle, suggests Kaplan, is really a scavenger, out to exploit the battle between the two super powers, the U.S. and Russia: "to take his prizes while the big antagonists are deadlocked-witness the oil deals France is busy making in the Middle East." The French President makes no secret of the fact that he considers the U.S. his best target. In fact, Gaullist logic makes the U.S. out to be the necessary target for France in the interest of world harmony "by contending that American power is dominant in the world, most secure in its seat, and most threatening...