Word: concernedly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...stagnate if it is made to serve practical goals." Researchers deal with the practical applications of scientific theories and thereby create technology, but they themselves are not scientists. They harvest the fruit of science using funds from government, industry and private sources, and this is, indeed, subject to public concern...
...society, declared recently that in her affluent and respectable precincts there was consternation over Jimmy Carter's dress and his insistence on carrying his suit bag. "If the American people had wanted their President to be a bellhop," she decreed, "they could have found one without all that concern about issues...
Freewheeling Style. The story is much the same in Latin America. From Rio, TIME Correspondent Barry Hillenbrand cables that Carter's concern with human rights at first prompted the Chilean and Argentine regimes to grant dissenters a bit more leeway. But in the past week "Argentina barred those held under the state-of-siege regulations from leaving the country-an option they had before. In Chile, the official state of siege has been extended for six more months, and last week the Christian Democratic Party and three other political groups were outlawed...
...acquaintance will be renewed this week as Fukuda arrives in Washington. The timing of the talks-which are expected to be low-keyed and general-could hardly be more appropriate. The Administration is mildly worried about its accumulated trade deficit with Japan ($5.4 billion last year) and shares the concern of U.S. businessmen who feel they are unfairly frozen out of Japanese markets. Washington would like Fukuda's government to encourage "voluntary" reductions of exports to the U.S.-and to act on complaints about the dumping of underpriced goods in the U.S., notably autos, color televisions and other electronic...
...assurance that the U.S. will maintain a strong military presence in the western Pacific. "Almost all Asian leaders," Fukuda told TIME Tokyo Bureau Chief William Stewart, "will be disturbed if the U.S. disrupts the basic tenor of its Asian policy. They have asked me to convey their concern." Fukuda is especially chary of "any disruption of the delicate balance offerees on the Korean peninsula. I plan to advise President Carter very strongly about this...