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

...contrast, Ludmila Shtern's fictional sketches poke fun at some of the gravest problems of everyday Soviet life, including endemic food shortages and epidemic alcoholism. Shtern, 48, who taught geology in Leningrad, has combined her new writing career with selling real estate in Boston. Vastly popular with émigré readers of the Novoye Russkoye Slovo (New Russian Word) and other Russian-language publications, her fiction is beginning to break into the pages of little magazines in the U.S. such as Stories and Pequod. Back in the Soviet Union, Shtern recalls, magazine editors regularly dispensed praise along with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Soviet Literature Goes West | 3/12/1984 | See Source »

...America was faced with perhaps the gravest Constitutional crisis of the 20th century. A series of crimes had been committed by the Nixon Administration, including theft, illegal surveillance, and obstruction of justice. Nixon's own intransigence and "imperial" style of executive leadership did not help his public standing either. Also, the bitter memory of Vietnam was still fresh in the national conscience--Nixon's part in it aroused mixed, but generally hostile, feelings. In general, a mood of antagonism to the Presidency reached an unsurpassed high in 1973, and a major result of this was the War Powers Resolution...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Who's Running the Show? | 11/16/1983 | See Source »

...subject was how the U.S. should counter menacing Communist moves on a Caribbean island. The President's advisers were sorely perplexed: every idea they could think of posed the gravest dangers. But in the end they hit on a successful course of action, and a partial record of how it evolved came to light last week. Timed with inadvertent irony as American troops were invading Grenada, the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston released tapes and transcripts of two meetings between J.F.K. and his top aides at the start of the Cuban missile crisis 21 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Cuban Crisis Revisited | 11/7/1983 | See Source »

...center, reversing both his onetime opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment and his support for the death penalty. Also, like his opponent, he is an unbudging advocate of rent control. Flynn, a former probation officer, who was a star basketball player at Providence College, says that in Boston the gravest inequality is economic, not racial. Accordingly, he tries not to pander to conventional white prejudices. His mother and tubercular father were on the dole for several years, he says, and so loose talk about " 'welfare chiselers' and 'welfare cheats' makes my stomach turn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Boston Wins by a Landslide | 10/24/1983 | See Source »

Ironically, this policy of secrecy, which is supposed to protect the harasser, has backfired on several occasions. The fact that Professor Dominguez is back in the classroom this semester has been taken by many as an indication that Harvard does not take sexual harassment, of even the gravest sort, seriously. It is the great public outcry against Harvard's nonchalant attitude which is ultimately subjecting Professor Dominguez to the most grueling punishment of all--having to face the disapproval of his students and colleagues in the midst of widespread publicity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A 'Disgraceful' Policy | 10/14/1983 | See Source »

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