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Word: branded (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...total to 108, with a total enrollment of 43,000 and a freshman class of 11,858, the highest ever. But the nation needs an estimated 50,000 additional doctors, and the increase in trainees will only nibble at the deficit. It was faculty members, acting out their own brand of idealism, who put research on the pedestal in the late '50s. Now some professors are following the students' lead in seeking to make training more appropriate to the practice of community medicine. Class hours devoted to pure science are being reduced in favor of earlier and more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A New Type of Doctor Emerges | 11/8/1971 | See Source »

...Dead that, unlike other youth culture wisdom, has been empirically verified: they're sometimes the best in the world, but when they're bad, they're the pits. And much as I like the New Riders on their own, my irresistible allegiance turns to the parent group's brand of insanity. The Dead seem to have lost their way. If the New Riders can help them find it again, they should do all of us a favor and do so quickly...

Author: By Dave Caploe, | Title: Riders of the Grateful Dead | 11/6/1971 | See Source »

...could never come to feel any sympathy for his fellow countrymen who work only eight, comes closest to the truth. A truly hollow man, Nixon is one who is simply driven. His presidency becomes his chance to wreak vegeance on a country that infused him ineradicably with its prevailing brand of spiritual emptiness...

Author: By Gregg J. Kilday, | Title: Hey kids, what time is it? It's Richard Nixon time! | 10/29/1971 | See Source »

There's a brand new morning rising clear and sweet and free...

Author: By Anne Tilton, | Title: Unification of Mankind: Baha'i | 10/29/1971 | See Source »

...Perfect Martini. Experienced Wodehouse readers will remain cheerfully secure in the knowledge that Jeeves will cleverly spring Bertie from these cataclysms. So unique is the Wodehouse brand of humor, however, that to describe it is as thankless and bootless as describing the taste of the perfect martini. Wodehouse (pronounced Woodhouse) can be compared to no other novelist, living or dead. His literary ancestor, instead, is the Roman dramatist Plautus, and, like Plautus, he is the manufacturer of a thousand comically crossed connections...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Wodehouse Aeternus | 10/25/1971 | See Source »

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