Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Some builders regard the M.I.T.-Harvard study as excessively gloomy. They contend that income is not the only measure of whether a family can afford to buy; huge numbers of people own houses that they can sell at a profit and use the equity to help buy another. The median-priced new house is out of sight for millions of people, but by definition, half of all houses are priced below the median. Even young first-time buyers can usually find something in the lower price ranges, though often it will be much less house than they dreamed about...
...conditioned comfort. The splendid setting of the meeting could hardly have clashed more jarringly with its purpose. At the U.N.'s invitation, the representatives had gathered in the Kenyan capital last week to discuss and devise ways of containing what an increasing number of experts regard as a major environmental danger: the creeping, seemingly relentless spread of the earth's deserts...
...closing of the ranks because American Jews are horrified at the prospect of a series of one-sided compromises in which the Israelis will pay." With their acute sense of survival-a sense developed in the ghettos of the Diaspora and the horrors of the Holocaust-most U.S. Jews regard that threat as far more important than Israel's internal politics. Says Marjorie Merlin Cohen, executive director of the National...
...carping, the proposed bill is likely to become law some time next year. The need for atomic power in a U.S. grown dangerously dependent on imports of foreign oil is simply too obvious. During the campaign, former Nuclear Engineer Carter argued that the U.S. should regard atomic power as a "last resort." His support of the bill shows that he recognizes it is time to call on that last resort, especially since his own Administration forecasts a need for an additional 320 plants by the year...
Carter's enthusiasm for Great Britain's James Callaghan is that of one pol for another. His regard for France's Valéry Giscard d'Estaing is rooted in the Frenchman's intellect. Egypt's Anwar Sadat made sense to Carter. "I wouldn't mind spending a weekend fishing with him," said Carter about Canada's Pierre Elliott Trudeau. While he was in London, the President met with the leaders of 16 nations from Luxembourg to Greece. He was armed with personal fact sheets and psychological profiles of each...