Word: reaps
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...desperation, Lopez Portillo devalued the peso in February. Then, victimized by his own indecisiveness and the pressures of the P.R.I.'s political machine, he was unable to hold firm on a wage freeze required to reap the anti-inflationary benefits of the devaluation. Within weeks, all government employees were given a 30% wage hike, and the government "recommended" that private-sector employers grant their workers increases of 10%, 20% or 30% "to restore purchasing power." In a single stroke, Lopez Portillo had wiped out most of the gains of the devaluation that had shaken his administration-and lost much...
...been spoiling for the fight against the Palestine Liberation Organization since he became Defense Minister last August. He had intensively lobbied Prime Minister Menachem Begin and his Cabinet to approve it. He aggressively directed every logistical detail of it. And, in the end, Ariel ("Arik") Sharon, 54, will reap the rewards, or the blame, for the success or failure of the enterprise. The stakes were high: Sharon hopes to become Prime Minister of Israel one day. But brinkmanship has always been his game. As one veteran Israeli politician observed last week, "He may just pull it off. If he does...
...further the evolution of mankind, and not just reap the benefits of past humanity's struggles, if we are to help the overcoming of our self-alienation from the spirit and not merely perpetrate it, then meditation--or a similar and truly contemplative practice--becomes, not so much a wicked affair, but rather a case of merely enjoying the level of consciousness which past heroes achieved for us. We contribute nothing, we pass on our mediocrity...
...stuff of the Ivy League. In his suggestion that students who do not achieve some "modest threshold" of college board scores be denied financial aid opportunities afforded those who transcend the cut-off mark. Bok was taken by his foes to mean that only the elite should reap the rewards of federal dollars. Aha! said reporters and columnists, educators and students: The president of Harvard has finally exposed himself as a closet snob...
...categories, competition for copies will drive up prices and may drive out investors without cash reserves. But the bibliophiles should not lose heart. The bulls may be loose in the bookshops, but they will pass on to fresher collectibles-Sony Walkmans, early videotapes. The real enthusiasts will reap the rewards-like the Manhattan dowager who a few years ago sold her signed first edition of A Tale of Two Cities. Told that the money would have appreciated more in a savings account, she replied, "But I so much prefer reading Dickens to my passbook." Of course, if she had chosen...