Word: scalese
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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He perseveres, pointing to another word. "Ubiquitous. Sometimes when you are walking around downtown L.A., the police are ubiquitous." Polite laughter. "Resonant. Many opera singers have a resonant quality to their voice." He breaks into a baritone, singing scales with a mock gravity.
In a stinging editorial that called this year's contest a "terrible campaign, a national disappointment," the Post faulted Bush for rhetoric that was "divisive, unworthy and unfair," but its pivotal objection was to what it saw as Dukakis' weak grasp of foreign policy. Other papers sounded almost ) regretful at...
It is the U.S. and Israel who refuse to negotiate with the PLO. Question 5 urges a more balanced approach to the entire conflict, an approach which stresses that both Palestinians and Israelis have equal rights to statehood and there must come a day when our government treats both peoples...
At the outset of the new court term, all eyes are focused on the pivotal figure of Justice Anthony Kennedy. Nominated by President Reagan last year, Kennedy, 52, could be the man who finally tips the scales to the right. "Can Justice Kennedy be the answer to conservatives' prayers?" asks...
The "bill of rights" provision is designed to tip the scales slightly toward taxpayers who are the subject of collections or other enforcement actions by the IRS. It would require the IRS to fully inform of taxpayers of their rights and triple the 30 days notice required before property is...