Word: resurrected
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...wants to do this country a favor," Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater commented acidly, "he might stay over there." About the most gentle comment made in the wake of the trip came from an aide to President Ford. "You can't blame Nixon for hankering for some kind of resurrection," he said. Ford himself acknowledged that Richard Nixon's China trip was "probably harmful" to him in New Hampshire, and before the primary, most Administration spokesmen seemed to feel that Nixon's purpose was less to resurrect himself than to crucify Ford. Some even speculated that Nixon wanted...
...unlike these three schools, the Marxists are pre-neoclassical. They seek to resurrect many of the pre-enoclassical concepts in use when Marx wrote, such as the labor theory of value, and they reject the new concepts and methods introduced by the neoclassicists. This is the source of their fundamental differences from the other, neoclassical schools. The Marxists, therefore, are not the latest thing in economic thought today, as they are always trying to present themselves, but the oldest...
...contrary, its strength has declined over the years, as Harvard assumed greater and greater control over female students. The final blow came when Radcliffe handed over its income to Harvard, giving up the last vestiges of independence. Harvard rules us now, like it or not. The fight to resurrect Radcliffe goes against the tide of history and against the nature of both institutions. It was set up to be an adjunct to Harvard, and now--without money, faculty or degrees--it is foolish to think it can be built up into an independent force in the University...
...cost of reconstruction has been estimated as high as $780 million. Most of the city may have to be bulldozed over and completely rebuilt. Prime Minister Whitlam has pledged to do whatever is necessary to resurrect Darwin, and proud Australians seemed to agree that the cost would be worth it. In an editorial the Melbourne Age wrote that it is already anticipating the "time when the city named after the great student of nature's primeval forces [will] rise up again and contend with the wind...
Carter was not the only prelate to resurrect the idea of married priests. Recognizing that evangelization involves the whole question of the church's ministry, Zaire's Joseph Cardinal Ma-lula asked that the bishops consider new ministries for which married clergy might be suitable. As for women's share in the ministry and their possible ordination as priests, Bishop Paul Verschuren of Helsinki suggested that an entire future synod be devoted to the role of women in the church. The very fact that such proposals could calmly be offered in the Pope's presence suggests...