Word: true
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...this age and in ages to come many things will be said about Jesus Christ, but the faithful, united with their shepherds and guided by the Spirit, will continue to believe and profess that Jesus Christ is true God and true man in one divine person, and that he is the Lord who will come again...
...true that over the years, the mines have become much safer. In 1948 there were 999 fatalities; last year 139 miners died on the job. The frequency of nonfatal accidents has dropped from 49.3 per million man-hours in 1948 to 36.07 in 1976. But mining still remains one of the most dangerous industrial occupations in the U.S. Says Barney Beard, president of Local 9111 in Waltonville, Ill.: "When I kiss my wife goodbye every day, she doesn't know if I'm going to get back home that night." Safety is also a consideration in the miners...
...almost wistful at the opportunities in Colorado. "There is some naivete in Denver," he says. "But there is adventure and openness, and a feeling of not having seen it all, a sense of hunger. It is true that art is international and timeless. But theater also has to do with roots, with expressing the specific character of a place and the common life that is shared. I think Denver might just...
Five years have now passed since the world's major industrial nations abandoned fixed exchange rates for the dollar, and the warnings of Cassandras that the end result could be global currency chaos seem uncomfortably close to coming true. Scarcely a week goes by without the once mighty greenback reeling from a fresh thrashing on the money markets; and when it does steady, as it did in Europe last week (see ECONOMY & BUSINESS), no one can trust the stability to last. Though the effects of this beating remain of only peripheral concern to most Americans-unless they travel abroad...
...delegation of corporate and government officials to tour the U.S., actively seeking, and signing orders for, more imports. Last week the mission fanned out from San Francisco to a score of cities to talk up a new liberalism in trade. In a flight of wish-it-were-true hyperbole, Delegation Chief Yoshizo Ikeda, president of Mitsui, the giant trading company, told a gathering in Atlanta that his country is "removing import quotas, slashing tariffs and streamlining import procedures in order to make Japan, this year, the least protected market of all the great trading powers, including...