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Word: dependance (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...must be able to exploit a politically disen-franchised sector of the labor force more intensely, and to export the economic and political costs of unemployment to underdeveloped countries, both of which migratory labor makes possible. Thus political stability and economic growth in the industrial centers of western Europe depend on the political divisions between countries within a continent which is at once economically integrated and unevenly developed...

Author: By Jonathan Zeitlin, | Title: Come Like the Dust, Go With the Wind | 3/25/1976 | See Source »

...other combat planes (principally F-4 Phantoms and the Israeli-designed Kfirs) are being outfitted with the latest electronic gadgets to aid in night flying missions and foil antiaircraft missiles. The Shrike air-to-surface missile has been deployed to knock out the radars on which antiaircraft batteries depend. In addition, Israel is receiving "smart" bombs, which can be guided onto targets. Still on Jerusalem's shopping list are American RPVs (remotely piloted vehicles), which can counter the Arabs' Russian-built SAMs by drawing antiaircraft fire. To bolster its ground forces, Jerusalem is acquiring the TOW antitank missiles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMAMENTS: A Deadly Race That No One Can Win | 3/22/1976 | See Source »

...nature, such a self-study is liable to lack objectivity. Dr. James Watson, the founder of behavioral psychology, pointed out that none of our knowledge can depend on data in which the observer and the observed are in the same person. The prohibition was lamentable, from the viewpoint of a fuller understanding of human behavior--after all, who but the individual himself is always present, with a front-seat view of everything he does? Freud recognized the risks involved in self-analysis, but rejected the loss to the behavioral sciences imposed by Watson's prohibition and so ignored it. Through...

Author: By Roger M. Klein, | Title: Totem and Taboo | 3/19/1976 | See Source »

...improbable becomes the norm in Albee's hands. Even when he seems to violate the plausible, he doesn't break the dramatic spell, but enhances it by adding to the brutel vacuity of the situation. And always the play does not depend solely on grotesque twists of plot for its effect. Albee's mastery of the English language at times can disper any incredulity with its beauty...

Author: By Tom Wright, | Title: Albee's Not | 3/18/1976 | See Source »

...EVENTS OF the last week are illustrative. The spark of the dispute was a Seattle Times news report on comments made by the dean in Seattle, Washington, in mid-February. In the story, Kilbridge is quoted as saying, "You have to depend on biological replacement of teachers, and they generally stop learning at the age of 35" and that "practicing architects don't even have a vocabulary to share their experienkes with others." While the article is not free from sloppy reporting, two witnesses have vouched for its overall accuracy. Kilbridge, for his part, has failed to request any retraction...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A New Dean For the GSD | 3/17/1976 | See Source »

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