Word: regretably
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...started to shout down his rhetoric, they were quickly drowned out by the ubiquitous Nixon youth, who learned to chant "Four more years!" at the Republican Convention and have not stopped since. If the Democrats started all the fuss over youth, the Republicans may be giving them cause to regret...
...past suffering from Japanese armies, saying that "we must remember such experiences and lessons." Tanaka limited himself to a terse acknowledgment that the "great troubles" that Japan had inflicted on China had given him cause for "profound self-examination"-in Japanese, a strong expression of repentance and regret...
...colleague of mins has forwarded the article by McSchoen and Miss Kinsley concerning Cambridge academics and the election, I regret to report that once again a resolution, which I have tried to live up to, but waived in your case, has proven to be warranted. That is, every time that I have spoken to a Crimson reporter. I found that my comments have been somewhat distorted, or occasionally even totally misreported. In your case, the former description is more accurate. Specifically, I never suggested that I was disturbed about the change in Mcgovern's basis of support,. I did indicate...
...Landau is usually very good when he discusses the motivation behind Kissinger's policy directives. His knowledge of Vietnamese history helps him illuminate such ironies as a proposed American peace plan which reiterates the treacherous 1946 and 1954 agreements with the French that the Vietnamese accepted to their later regret. He appreciates the paradox of Kissinger's urge for personal, Congress of Vienna style, diplomacy that twentieth-century communications have made obsolete. Yet he fails to see the greater irony behind the historical comparison...
...have long cherished a desire to visit the United States and to meet and learn to know her people," Japan's Emperor Hirohito told United Press Correspondent Wilfred Fleisher in 1921. "I greatly regret that I am unable to carry out my wishes on this occasion, but since it is only a fortnight's trip from Japan to the United States, I hope it will only be a deferred pleasure." Hirohito's pleasure has been deferred for 51 years, but the trip is less formidable these days. So the Emperor, now 71, plans to accept President Nixon...