Word: mutually
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Instead of fighting the Japanese, U.S. businessmen can join with them in some mutual projects to make money and, incidentally, help out the have-nots of the world. Harold Scott, director of the U.S. Bureau of International Commerce, believes that as Japan's labor shortage worsens, its industrialists will gradually shift their stress from exports to American-style overseas investment. U.S. companies could speed the process by proposing joint ventures with Japanese firms in third-country markets. Scott envisions, for example, a combination of U.S. and Japanese timber companies to develop the huge lumber resources of the Upper Amazon...
...stated that the proposed Independent Work program would be supplemented by a new course given by departments in which small groups of students would participate in supervised reading or research. The new course, May suggested, would closely resemble tutorial, and it would be designed to make the "mutual obligations" of teachers and students "more clear than [they are] currently under Independent Study...
...university founded on the principle of freedom, when faculty and administrative personnel attended other colleges with other cultural traditions. How can members of the Harvard faculty and administration who never graduated from Harvard College, really understand the passion, or Puritanical zeal of Harvard College graduates for freedom and mutual respect in the search for truth? How can Harvard students, equipped by their faculty with a double standard on academic freedom, convince an American in grave need of total commitment to quality education for all, that Harvard College graduates have the necessary commitment and moral integrity to win the battle...
After more than two decades of frozen mutual hostility, the U.S. and China were beginning to talk and thus in a sense to see each other once more. China began to capture the American imagination, as it has many times before, and all sorts of Americans-including the President-started to talk about traveling there. In a world of diplomatic and military deadlocks, the sudden breach in the Great Wall was a relief...
...critic of the Vietnam war for years, and was an influential leader of the McCarthy campaign in 1968. Huntington, now Thomas Professor of Government at Harvard, was a foreign policy advisor to Hubert Humphrey's presidential campaign and a supporter of the government's program in Indochina. According to mutual friends, the two men disagreed so sharply over the war that they stopped speaking to each other for several years...