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Word: fran (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

Marino came into the game the nation's most highly touted quarterback, but on this day he wasn't even the best on Alumni Field. Doing his best to look as wild and innovative as the early Fran Tarkenton. Boston College's Doug Flutie stole the spotlight. Throwing underhand, sidearing on the run, and while falling down, Flutie accounted for 304 yards through the air against the nation's best defense and kept his team...

Author: By Howard N. Mead, | Title: Pitt Downs B.C., 29-24 | 11/2/1981 | See Source »

Behind a bulletproof plastic shield, like travelers in a time machine, a jubilant Ronald Reagan and his guest, French President François Mitterrand, watched the Bicentennial celebration of a transatlantic partnership that brought independence to the 13 colonies. "The surrender at Yorktown," Reagan told the crowd of 60,000 (one of whom presented him with a reproduction of a Revolutionary sword), "was a victory for the right of self-determination. It was and is the affirmation that freedom will eventually triumph over tyranny." His Socialist French counterpart, however, had a more pointedly contemporary interpretation of the celebration. Said Mitterrand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Last Bicentennial Bash | 11/2/1981 | See Source »

...festivities, all stressing the longevity of Franco-American friendship, buffered any ideological friction created by the Presidents' disparate history lessons with friendly toasts and good cheer. Mitterrand and his wife Danielle were hosts at a Sunday lunch aboard the moored French frigate De Grasse (named for Admiral François de Grasse, whose naval blockade sealed the English defeat at Yorktown). There, after lobster and lamb, Mitterrand told Reagan that he relished "the humor of your conversation" and toasted "the generous smile of Mrs. Reagan." A few hours later the Presidents, their wives and 92 others arrived, amid fife...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Last Bicentennial Bash | 11/2/1981 | See Source »

...Communist daily L'Humanité took the opportunity to attack Reagan and to attract attention to the peace march held in Paris last Sunday. Beneath a front-page photograph of Reagan before a mushroom cloud, the paper ran the giant headline: NO EUROSHIMA! But the government of President François Mitterrand supported its American ally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Diplomacy: East-West War of Words | 11/2/1981 | See Source »

...Western Europe. Papandreou's victory was immediately compared with that of his fellow socialist, François Mitterrand, who was elected President of France five months ago after 23 years of conservative rule. Many French analysts sympathetic to Mitterrand saw the Greek socialists' victory as an affirmation that a fragile democracy had come of age. Pronounced the leftist daily Le Monde: "It is part of a democratic switch from one political party to another that has been all but absent in modern Greek politics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Greece: Yes to the Prospect of Allagi | 11/2/1981 | See Source »

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