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Word: mutually (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...Peace & Relaxation." In one cable Communist Chou angrily denounced the U.S. for "seizing" Formosa and "manufacturing" a mutual-security treaty with the Nationalists there (TIME, Dec. 13). "To convict foreign spies caught in China is China's internal affair," he said coldly. "There is no justification at all for the United Nations to try to interfere. . . No amount of clamor on the part of the U.S. can shake China's just stand of exercising its own sovereign rights...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: Mission to Peking | 12/27/1954 | See Source »

...from the point of view of its own aims and ambitions, it would become possible to negotiate with some hope of reaching solutions. There are problems which, in the present temper of the world appear insoluble [e.g.], the unification of Germany. But no problem is insoluble where there is mutual goodwill and where concessions are not regarded by one side as a triumph and by the other as a disgrace. The truth is so plain and simple that it seems as if governments must in time become aware of it: the Communist and non-Communist worlds can live together...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Judgments & Prophecies, Dec. 27, 1954 | 12/27/1954 | See Source »

...reception room on the fifth floor of the State Department building in Washington, the U.S. Secretary of State and Nationalist China's Foreign Minister signed a mutual-defense treaty. When the ceremony was over, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles shook the hand of Foreign Minister George K.C. (for Kung-Chao) Yeh, and uttered a most significant foreign-policy pronouncement. Said Dulles: "It is my hope that the signing of this defense treaty will put to rest once and for all rumors and reports that the U.S. will in any manner agree to the abandonment of Formosa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATION: Counterthrust in the Pacific | 12/13/1954 | See Source »

Aside from the mutual security pact with Formosa, U.S. policy in the Far East last week was the object of continued confusion and contradiction in the face of Communist boldness. The boldness crack led out of Peking as the Chinese Communists rejected the U.S. protest against imprisonment of 13 Americans as spies. The confusion and contradiction whirled up and down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: Contradiction in the Capital | 12/13/1954 | See Source »

First, Mankiewicz tries to recapture the salty flavor of epigramatic dialogue that marked All About Eve. Sometimes he partially succeeds. For example, a fading ingenue hurls "What have you got that I haven't?" at Ava Gardner, and is told by a mutual friend, "What she's got you can't spell, and what you have you used to have." But more often, the lines strain hard to evoke gasps of admiration; they produce only grunts of mystification. To prove that disaster has struck, a publicity agent says of a movie mogul, "I could tell something was wrong because...

Author: By Robert J. Schoenberg, | Title: The Barefoot Contessa | 11/30/1954 | See Source »

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