Word: equal
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Dates: during 1980-1980
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...most part, Carter defined the issues of the debate--questions like the Equal Rights Amendment--but Reagan advisers felt their candidate defended his record admirably and showed himself to be a "warm and compassionate...
Because as Americans we are committed to the fundamental constitutional principle that all people are created equal and are endowed with certain inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness...
...That we perceive the legitimate struggles for equal justice and rights for everyone not as a cause that divides us, but as the imperative that unites...
Speaking through a translator, Mamonova cited the populous majority of women in the Soviet Union and the existence of equal rights provisions in the U.S.S.R. constitution as reasons for this potential, but warned that "the movement is very young and the patriarchal tradition is still ingrained in Soviet society...
...would be hard for any but the most committed Gainsborough enthusiast (and they exist) to rank him equal to those two pillars of English vision, John Constable and J.M.W. Turner. He did not have Constable's deep, poetic curiosity about the facts of landscape; still less did he rise to Turner's heights of sublimity or audacity of color. But both painters admired him. "Soothing, tender and affecting," Constable called Gainsborough's landscapes. "His object was to deliver a fine sentiment, and he has fully accomplished it ... The stillness of noon, the depths of twilight...