Word: fellowing
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Dates: during 1980-1980
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...writing this letter to your magazine so that it can be read by the largest number of people possible. My fellow Americans and I have for the past eight months been held hostage here in Tehran, and as a result of this our morale becomes quite low at times. One of the reasons for an uplift of that morale is mail sent to us by family and friends. But what continually amazes me is the mail sent to us not only from my country but from people all over the world, whom I've never met, wishing us good...
...Chairman O'Neill's attempt to order a roll call on the Kennedy economic planks. The Senator's adherents danced, sang and chanted, "We want Teddy!" O'Neill wisely gave up, signaled the convention band to join in the fun with medleys of For He's a Jolly Good Fellow, Macnamara's Band and Happy Days Are Here Again...
...Beheshti and his clerical allies. The new Prime Minister is unimposing in person; he has no popular following and little apparent political savvy. Critics say that he is "headstrong" only when standing on firm ground. Arrested for distributing antigovernment literature in 1974, Raja'i is said by fellow inmates to have begged for mercy when tortured by SAVAK, the Shah's secret police. "His behavior at the time was certainly not heroic," notes one former prisoner. Students in his math classes at the Kamal Islamic high school in Tehran describe Raja'i as "inflexible" and "humorless," qualities...
...script I had read before. The whole thing seemed scenarioed and choreographed." The disappointed Kennedy fan said she voted for Carter in 1976, but may not do it again. "This may be the first time since I was 21 that I won't vote," she lamented. What about fellow Hollywood Veter an Ronald Reagan? Said Shelley: "I met him during a screen test in 1945, and I seem to remember seeing a couple of gray hairs in his sideburns. He seemed old back then, but now his hair has gotten blacker, and he's gotten younger...
...tensions that divide makers of public policy and leaders of private enterprise. His vehicle: joint efforts by Harvard's venerable Business School and its younger neighbor on the opposite bank of the Charles River in Cambridge, Mass., the John F. Kennedy School of Government. With the aid of fellow professors, businessmen and another former Cabinet member, Dunlop has finally devised a way to bridge that tide: by offering students of the two graduate schools, as well as political and business leaders, some insights into the thinking of their presumed rivals. Their concept is contained in a collection of essays...