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Word: facelessly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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However wedded to that style of operation Nixon may be, it has already proved expensive for him. When he introduced his Cabinet members on television before taking office, they seemed to be faceless men stamped from the same die. That is no longer so. He declared at the time that each possessed "an extra dimension." Some of them have proved that they do, and not always in a fashion that is to Richard Nixon's liking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: The Widening Cracks in Nixon's Cabinet | 6/1/1970 | See Source »

Many Harvard students- us included- have tried to avoid confronting the Faculty as an enemy. Our enemy is Richard Nixon, and the faceless, brutal bureaucracy he heads. We have been increasingly appalled as the Faculty, out of some misplaced fear of political involvement, seems more and more concerned with thwarting students fighting the government than with joining in the fight. The Faculty's action- or rather lack of it- on Tuesday is the most discouraging sign yet. The proud Harvard Faculty seems determined that when the nation splits in two and machineguns chatter in the Yard a scholarly meeting across...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: On Strike Tower of Babel | 5/7/1970 | See Source »

...think the other thing that's healthy is no white person today can be unaware of the existence of black people. I think we've been more, as a people, victims of being ignored than even being oppressed, that for the most part we were anonymous and invisible. Faceless. We were things, and object. People didn't even care enough to hate us. We just didn't count...

Author: By Wallace TERRY Ii, | Title: Getting It All Together: Part II | 5/6/1970 | See Source »

...Italian way, as TIME's Rome Bureau Chief James Bell explains, is based on unreconstructed individualism. Everyone fancies himself the tenor singing a solo at La Scala; nobody is willing to settle for serving as the relatively faceless member of a big choir. "There isn't a political leader in the country," one party boss candidly admits, "who will subordinate his party's desires to the good of the state." For that matter, there is probably not a political leader who would subordinate his own personal ambitions to the good of his party, either. The result: everybody...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Italy: The Soloists | 4/6/1970 | See Source »

CONSUMER ACTION: Consumers could help themselves?and society?by complaining more about shoddy goods and slapdash service. When it comes to complaining, most Americans are really members of the Silent Majority. Ari Kiev, head of Cornell Medical College's social psychiatry program, figures that the atmosphere of the faceless society conditions customers to put up with inefficiency. Many Americans, he says, "have been trained from early on that nothing can be done. So much is made of rules and regulations, of the idea that 'you had better check it out first.' We become very dependent on others to give...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: America the Inefficient | 3/23/1970 | See Source »

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