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Word: meant (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Language skills in this study included reading, speaking fluency and word recognition; number skills meant arithmetic and in some cases, also mathematics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: USOE Booklets Describe Compensatory Education | 3/24/1969 | See Source »

...police. How a copy survived and reached the West is unknown. A sensational melodrama, set in the 1840s, the work bristles with bandits and bursts of gunfire. The heroine is a serf girl, blinded as the result of a violent quarrel between master and slave. She seems to be meant to symbolize Russia, forever the victim of the conflict between barbarism and the simple, instinctive virtue that exists in its soul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia: Four New Works | 3/21/1969 | See Source »

...state-ordered execution of his clients but goes so far as to include game hunters. Foreman takes genuine pleasure in telling the story of a deer hunter who, while sitting in the branches of a tree, fell out and impaled himself on the antlers of a deer he had meant to shoot. That, says Foreman, was "divine justice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lawyers: There Is No Better Than Me | 3/21/1969 | See Source »

What, then, remains of the traditional doctrine? "The term original sin," University of Chicago Theologian Joseph Sittler says, "remains as a kind of pail which we've drained of the old literal statements and refilled with quite new interpretations. The doctrine meant to point to the gravity, the universality, and the demonic results of evil. And the language was a way of stating this. But we no longer buy the old notion of biological transmission or try to have a system of inheritance. The notion of 'original' means profound-trans-individual, way back and deep down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theology: The Sin of Everyman | 3/21/1969 | See Source »

...been ready to apply her anthropological findings to the contemporary world. During World War II, for example, she wrote a booklet telling G.I.s how to get along with British girls (because of cultural differences, she warned, they were apt to think that an American's playful advances were meant more seriously than he intended). "Margaret sees herself as the mother of us all," says Child Psychologist Martha Wolfenstein, one of her longtime collaborators...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Margaret Mead Today: Mother to the World | 3/21/1969 | See Source »

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