Word: foe
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Administration critics in Congress remained skeptical. Even Senate Republicans chided Haig for the absence of proof when he appeared before the Appropriations Subcommittee. "Your policy is being questioned by the American people, and abandoned by friend and foe alike," said Wisconsin's Robert Kasten. "If you have any evidence of outside interference in El Salvador, it is imperative it be brought forward. We want to support Administration policy, but we find it difficult to do so." Said Vermont Democrat Patrick Leahy: "We are having trouble with your contradictory statements. This is hard on those of us who must make...
...that secured Harvard's share of the crown. "The whole team played in a way that just embarrassed the whole Dartmouth team, "he remembers, calling it a wonderful win." The victory was even sweeter for Gunnoe since his best friend from his Towson, Md. hometown and four-year collegiate foe captained the Indians that year...
Secret taping by Presidents has been generally condemned, but there may be another message in those reels and discs. There is no such thing as a casual conversation with a President, either by friend or foe. Every presidential word is a potential time bomb for good or bad, when it is carried out of the Oval Office to be used. Presidents know that. And visitors understand that what they say to a President can be just as explosive. It will always be so, and should be, as long as the office has the power it does...
Harvard had to rise to the occasion after the disappointment of Friday night's match in Ithaca. Always a formidable foe, Columbia has had marked success in recent years including the League title last year, and so the Crimson grapplers had their work cut out for them...
...country in the antinuclear movement, the activists tended to approve of Chancellor Helmut Schmidt's initial lukewarm reaction to Jaruzelski's crackdown. Typical was the attitude of Erhard Eppler, a member of the national executive committee of Schmidt's Social Democratic Party and a foe of the nuclear arms race. "For the most part, the peace movement was just as disgusted with what happened in Poland as anyone else," Eppler told TIME Senior Correspondent William Rademaekers. "The events were a shock, but the shock was overshadowed by the very emotional reaction of the Reagan Administration . . . If there...