Word: prided
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...says he grew up in Mashpee when it was still an Indian community. "We took advantage of [the land]," Peters says. "We learned a lot of things about our culture, about our history. We had a lot of pride. I find it very difficult to accept the fact that we've lost this thing. It makes me feel very...
...marauding Tyson succeeds in taking over. ConAgra, which already controls 20% of the U.S. beef industry, 33% of the lamb market and nearly 10% of broiler production, would like to bring Holly Farms' Weaver frozen-chicken label into the same shed with its Armour, Banquet and Country Pride brands. Tyson is now suing both companies in an attempt to overturn the lockup deal. Both Tyson and ConAgra are hungry for a bigger helping of the sizzling $7 billion U.S. chicken market. Largely because of health concerns over fat and cholesterol in beef, U.S. consumers have increased their annual per capita...
...little bit different from before," Kremer says. But, he admits, creating an international development program--for parts of the world which have never known televisions, private automobiles or libraries and in which volunteers can teach with greater flexibility than for larger groups like the Peace Corps--is cause for pride...
...painted with swastikas. Gay men and lesbians at the University of Texas at Austin have been pelted with rocks and beer bottles while participating in campus parades. At Temple University in Philadelphia, 130 undergraduates have formed a White Students Union dedicated to fighting affirmative-action programs and promoting "white pride...
...instead of using his presidential experience to offer us a fresh look at the Soviet Union and the budget deficit, the two greatest challenges facing the nation Reagan waxed philosophical about his administration's accomplishments. He called his presidency's greatest achievement the "the resurgence of national pride...