Word: mutually
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Minority students say that this responsibility is more the College's than theirs. Students are not in a position, they say, where they can even hope to alter long-held racial attitues and create an environment in which members of the Harvard community can develop a mutual respect...
...partnership of long standing and great mutual success. Champion, born in Geneva, Ill., had played supper clubs when he was just out of high school, danced with his first wife Marge through a succession of movie musicals (Show Boat, Jupiter's Darling). Although he won his first Tony Award in 1949, Champion made his big smash as a director with Bye Bye Birdie (1960). Subsequently he did much of his most successful work on Merrick productions (Carnival!, I Do, I Do) and in 1964 gave the producer his biggest hit, Hello, Dolly!, one of the most spectacular theatrical bonanzas...
...strategy of Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) insists that nuclear weapons have no utility in the operation of policy. Their only use, say the MADmen, is to hold up our end of a suicide pact with the U.S.S.R. This doctrine can't assure survival because survival is not its objective...
Some elements of counterforce have been part of U.S. strategy for decades. But the U.S. has relied largely on what policymakers term "mutual assured destruction" (MAD). The theory is that the U.S.'s ability to retaliate against a Soviet attack by obliterating the residents and factories of Moscow and other major cities would deter the Kremlin from launching a nuclear strike against America. In turn, the Soviet capability to destroy U.S. cities has been seen as deterring Washington from attacking the U.S.S.R. Because such a situation in effect holds hostage the population centers of both superpowers, theorists call...
That was little short of miraculous. As this lively history recounts, the Resistance began as many hundreds of separate, desperate decisions by men and women whose circumstances varied widely. Mutual opposition to the Germans was never sufficient reason for leaders from the extreme left and extreme right to set aside traditional class hatred. The arrogant assumption of authority from the distance of London by the little-known Charles de Gaulle was a complicating factor that served to divide as often as it unified...