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Word: benignly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...increasingly wary of "new" models whose only visible changes are reshuffled buttons and knobs, especially if the old models still work. Today's consumer demands something really different, and in 1958, industry responded by spending $10 billion on research and development in the hope of creating a benign circle of economic activity: the exciting demand for new products creates employment, which in turn results in more money for more workers to buy still more goods. "The more we get," says Curtis C. Rogers of the Market Research Corp. of America, "the more we are willing to work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Business in 1958 | 12/29/1958 | See Source »

...Colosseum and the Forum ("That's where Cicero stood"), and wife Olive shopped for Christmas presents of handkerchiefs and Venetian glass. Then Baptist Diefenbaker called at the Vatican for an audience with Pope John XXIII, chatted for 15 minutes, emerged exclaiming at the new Pope's "benign, amiable" personality "and his modest outlook." He quoted the Pope as having told him (through an interpreter): "Here I am at the end of the road and at the top of the heap...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CANADA: Here I Am . . . | 11/24/1958 | See Source »

...knew the depth of his tiredness." It is not difficult to see why Tracy is tired. His director, John Sturges, has insisted on everything, and allowed for nothing. He has Tracy running the gamut from the Hollywood equivalent of an El Grecian Christ figure, to the benign, twinkling-eyed mentor of an obnoxious little boy, who takes himself as seriously as the ambitious lead in an amateur Caucasian production of a Japanese morality play...

Author: By Alan H. Grossman, | Title: The Old Man and the Sea | 11/18/1958 | See Source »

...going to the dogs." More conspicuous than the lack of reform movement was the lack of an atmosphere where anyone would even take the idea of reform seriously. Fearing a "bloody revolution" from below, Mirza convinced Ayub that it was necessary to replace the inept democratic regime with a "benign martial law to assist the civil power to clean up this mess...

Author: By Jonathan Beecher, | Title: Pakistan Palaver | 11/12/1958 | See Source »

Though most of the new dictators have pledged to restore constitutions and democratic government with the passing of the emergency that brought them power, there is no guarantee that they will do so. Like Mirza's, their authority is revolution. Sympathetic to the West and benign to its own people as General Ayub's government may now appear, Nehru has reminded the United States that it is not accurate to maintain that Pakistan still belongs to the free world...

Author: By Jonathan Beecher, | Title: Pakistan Palaver | 11/12/1958 | See Source »

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