Word: governed
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...closing session of the party's first mid-term national convention, Strauss said, "Together, we have shown that the Democratic party is ready to govern America again...
...discernible terminus--the day, ten days or so after the UMW's 38-member bargaining council approves a new contract, and a majority of members vote "yes" on the provisions President Arnold B. Miller and the Bituminous Coal Operators Association hammer out--provisions that will govern their working lives for the next three years...
Lower Subsidies. The poor were at least partially protected by increased government welfare benefits, but Israel's middle class was severely hit. As a result of devaluation and lower govern ment subsidies for basic commodities, prices of most items last week were in creased anywhere from 35% to 200%. The cost of sugar, which already was 21.60 per lb., tripled, and milkwent up 60%. Egg prices jumped 64%, bread 100%, meat 35%. Bus fares will rise 60%, and gasoline 64%, to $1.86 per gal. Fuel oil for industry zoomed up 117%. The standard of li ving of most middle...
...possibly four, depending on the outcome of the close race in North Dakota?to their existing majority of 58. Further, the Democrats wrested nine statehouses from Republicans, while giving up only four of their own, not including Alaska, where the race was still unresolved. That meant that Democrats will govern at least 36 states, including eight of the ten most populous. Democrats also gained control of eight additional state legislatures, upping their total to 36. No wonder that when one top adviser to President Gerald Ford was asked for his reaction to the election results, his response was to gulp...
...Johnson once proposed that if Bishop Berkeley and other metaphysicians doubted the physical existence of things, they might reassure themselves by kicking a rock: those who had trouble arriving at reality abstractly would find that their feet would tell them the truth. A similar standard of common sense should govern lawyers and judges in their continuing debate over fair trials and a free press in the U.S. At the heart of this classic tension between two democratic principles is the question of whether jurors are capable of rendering a conscientious and just verdict even in cases they may have read...