Word: reza
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...succeeded, it would lock the West for long years into paying for its oil high prices that might not hold up in an open market. Anyway, the oil producers for the moment show little interest in settling for any price other than the highest they can get. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi of Iran has said that a fixed price for oil would be acceptable only if the West could also guarantee fixed prices for the goods that it sells to oil producers -an obvious impossibility in view of global inflationary trends...
...these rates, many developing countries may be forced out of the petroleum market altogether. The impact in the industrialized world will also be severe. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi of Iran, a non-Arab nation that has shunned the boycott but participated in the price hikes, warned last week: "As to the industrial world, I think that they will have to realize that the era of their terrific progress and even more terrific income and wealth based on cheap oil is gone. Eventually, they will have to tighten their belts...
Under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Iranians have been working furiously to expand and diversify their economy. Thanks to the quickened flow of oil money, the government has announced that its $16 billion budget for next year-the largest ever-would be balanced. Rumors that a 20% raise for civil servants might be in the budget, though, swiftly sent retail prices up 10%. The government promptly ordered out "anti-price-hike squads" to warn shopkeepers against inflationary gouging...
...that women, when they are in power, are much harsher than men ... You're schemers, you're evil. Every one of you." The misogynist? Iran's Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, 54, in an interview with idol-smashing Italian Journalist Oriana Fallaci published in the New Republic. Fallaci, whose belt already holds the scalps of Henry Kissinger, Willy Brandt and Nguyen Van Thieu, scored again with the revelation that the Shah is not, after all, a ladies' man. What prompted His Sublime Highness's anger, however, was something quite simple. Fallaci had asked...
...surprise, then, that President Nixon last week accorded an especially effusive Washington welcome to the man who has pledged that the waterway will remain open to all: Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, Aryamehr, Shahanshah of Iran, scion of 2,500 years of Persian power and self-appointed (with U.S. encouragement) policeman of the Persian Gulf. He had two private sessions totaling three hours in the President's Oval Office. Then the Shah, 53, and his stunning third wife, Empress Farah, 34, were feted by the President at a state dinner in the White House (the 115 guests included a gusher...