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

...price is for Blacks to forsake their very identity as a race in order to get ahead. The price is to give up Black friendships we have formed out of choice in favor of "inter-ethnic" ties for the sake of future financial contacts. Kilson's argument makes perfect monetary sense but true friendships should be of a higher order...

Author: By Christopher J. Farley, | Title: Parochial Moorings Don't Bog Down | 3/4/1985 | See Source »

While the Pentagon tries to build the U.S. a perfect shield, it is hard at work trying to overcome Soviet defenses. In the late '60s the U.S. developed the MIRV (multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle) to saturate Soviet antimissile systems. Now that the Soviets are again beefing up their own defenses, the Pentagon is asking $174 million to develop a MARV (maneuverable reentry vehicle) that could dart and weave to avoid anti- missile missiles. The disclosure of the MARV research is awkward for the Reagan Administration because it undercuts the President's argument that it is possible to build...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bigger Bucks for Smarter Bombs | 3/4/1985 | See Source »

...wife, Beatrice. The daughter of a rancher and the mother of four children by a previous marriage, she and Pickens first met as college students in Oklahoma. She married one of Pickens' fraternity brothers, but they divorced in 1969. Pickens describes his life with Beatrice as "the perfect deal." She is almost as sure a shot as Pickens (an award-winning marksman), with whom she likes to hunt quail. A skilled horsewoman, she is also deeply interested in her husband's work. The year they were married, 1972, she enrolled in a geology course at Amarillo College and earned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High Times for T. Boone Pickens | 3/4/1985 | See Source »

...Baxters), "adventurer and explorer," is discovered by a group of rich idlers in an Egyptian tomb and whisked home with them for "a madcap Manhattan weekend," all supper clubs and penthouses, cocktail shakers and white telephones. Movies like Purple Rose, delicately parodied here, proposed not just the possibility of perfect love at first sight but of permanent romantic transcendence at second glance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Now Playing At the Jewel the Purple Rose of Cairo | 3/4/1985 | See Source »

...restaurant meal with stage money. See his puzzlement when he leaps behind the wheel of a car and it refuses to take off. ("This is real life," practical Cecilia murmurs. "They don't start without a key.") See him plant a perfect movie kiss on her lips and then frown suddenly: "Where's the fade-out? . . . You make love without fade-outs?" But if transfiguration delights those blessed by it, it confounds those it fails to touch. One of the reasons Cecilia loves movies is that the people in them are so "well spoken." But with the mainspring of their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Now Playing At the Jewel the Purple Rose of Cairo | 3/4/1985 | See Source »

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