Word: favority
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Carter would certainly go along with Mondale's general approach to these programs, and there is general agreement between the two on a number of other basic issues that are bound to arise during the campaign. Like Carter, Mondale is in favor of tax reform to help the poor and the middle class. (Mondale sponsored the $35-per-taxpayer and dependent income tax cut that benefited millions of Americans last April 15.) Both men would oppose building the B-l strategic bomber (total cost when fully deployed: $22 billion) until more test results are in, but both would keep...
...Pepsi, which was always in the L glass. Again Coke executives cried foul, contending that just as people preferred M to Q, they liked L better than S. Questioned about this, Dr. Ernest Dichter, a motivational research expert, reported that he knew of no studies indicating a bias in favor of the letter...
...problem is Jimmy Carter, whose early capture of the Democratic presidential nomination removed virtually all suspense from the convention, except perhaps for the vice-presidential selection. Another reason will be ABC's offer of an alternative. Since 1968, the network has rejected gavel-to-gavel coverage in favor of a couple of hours of filmed and taped highlights and late-night live action. "Edited coverage," network officials call that abbreviated schedule, and at the last Democratic convention it paid off well. While CBS and NBC were carrying the usual speeches, floor demonstrations and mid-aisle interviews, ABC won half...
There are only two occasions when the proponents choose to go beyond the discussion of their facility's safety: when they tell us that anyone who knows anything about pathogenic bacteria is in favor of the research proceeding immediately, and when they say that stopping the research is tantamount to being pro-cancer...
...FIRST VIEW sounds like a logical point in favor of the proponents. If those who knows the most about the research believe it is fine, then why bother to listen to the uninformed objections? Still, there are a few knowledgeable dissenters, including Erwin Chagaff of Columbia and Caltech's Sinsheimer. And, an analogy to another situation--decisions involving the military--shows just how flawed this logic is. After all who knows more about how to wage war than the generals, and yet recent experience tells us that the generals, so itching to launch their projects, need to be regulated...