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Word: mutually (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...conditioned by 16 years of Gaullism, and much of French history as well, to think in terms of national grandeur. As a starter, Giscard said that he had invited the other members of the Common Market to meet in Paris late this month or early in December to discuss mutual problems. He also proposed that early next year a small group of oil producers and consumers should get together to consider the multiple problems of oil. Europe, he said, should have only one voice at that meeting. European skeptics wondered how serious and determined Giscard really would prove...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: And Now, Concertation | 11/4/1974 | See Source »

MICHAEL MARTORANO, as Deeley, holds up well through the skirmishes of the first act, succumbing as Anna woos Kate just before the curtain. But he crumbles early in the second act, just after he has dealt Anna a setback in their battle of mutual degradation. Deeley's heavy emphasis on second meanings and his lumbering, wounded desperation rob his words, his weapons, of the strength they had held in the first act. The veneer of civility, too, skillfully maintained in Act I, becomes a travesty earlier than it should...

Author: By Stephen Tifft, | Title: A Membrane of Civility | 11/1/1974 | See Source »

...success is, of course, mutual property; the syndication rights on her current shows alone would make Mary a millionairess. But her husband, Grant Tinker, has exclusive property rights to all the pressures of success. In addition to the long-running Mary Tyler Moore and Bob Newhart shows, plus the overnight smash Rhoda, his company has been churning out a series of series. All bear the MTM trademark-a strong comic idea and a stronger supporting cast. But even these cannot guarantee infallibility. One show, the cantankerous new The Texas Wheelers, is Tinker's first failure, a comedy that guttered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rhoda and Mary -Love and Laughs | 10/28/1974 | See Source »

...Pirandello's great plays, we are forced, with his characters, to view role-playing with compassion: "The harder the struggle for life and the more one's weakness is felt, the greater becomes the need for mutual deception." Pirandello had been aware of this long before Chee-Chee--he wrote these words in 1908. But in Chee-Chee's hands, deception is stripped of any moral value, and becomes a cold and petty instrument of gain...

Author: By Stephen Tifft, | Title: Pirandellian Calisthenics | 10/24/1974 | See Source »

...apocalyptic" famine by 2010 is to tackle at once every aspect of the problem. Population must be curbed, and there must be accelerated planting, economic investment and worldwide diversification of industry. The result would be a truly interwoven global economic system in which all nations helped one another for mutual gain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: The Club of Rome: Act Two | 10/21/1974 | See Source »

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