Word: harms
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Kennedy, "we will either find a flight of capital from this country to construct factories within that wall, or we will find ourselves in serious economic trouble. We cannot just sell and never buy." To convince the nation that the new trade laws would do far more good than harm-and are, in any case, essential to the U.S. role in the free world-the Administration is already bringing up big guns. Last week Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon pleaded for new trade laws as being "crucial" to the nation's financial health, warned that the U.S. will...
...move toward freer trade. "We have been the evangelists of the virtues of free competition. We have preached this gospel incessantly to our European friends." Should the U.S. surrender to protectionism, "we would set off a chain reaction of retaliation and counter-retaliation that would do irreparable harm to the whole Free World, but would hurt us most...
...asked him what to do." In the tones of a Delphic priestess, Darya continued: "Yesterday I consulted Lenin again, and he seemed to stand before me as if alive, and said, 'It is unpleasant for me to lie next to Stalin, who caused the party so much harm...
...either convert air motion into electrical signal or electrical signal into air motion. A phonograph cartridge has the related but somewhat different task of converting wiggles in plastic into electrical signals approximating those originally made by the recoring engineer's mikes. While neither a speaker nor a microphone can harm the air it contacts in its attention to its duty, a cartridge can wreak havoc on its medium, the plastic of your records. Clearly, your choice of a cartridge will have a strong bearing on the satisfaction you receive from your home music system. The immediate factor of sound quality...
...damage health. But authorities point out that weather and other uncertain factors can concentrate fallout to high local levels. And the worst is still to come: most of the dangerous radioactive products of the Soviet tests are still floating high in the stratosphere. No one can predict how much harm they will do when they eventually come down...