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

While he longs for journalistic freedom, Anderson has encouraged him to leave his options open. "It might be that a year or two there (in the White House) would help his writing rather than hurt it," Anderson said last week Anderson believes that Fallows has the proper mixture of abilities to serve as a speechwriter--a mixture that has steadily increased Carter's trust in the Harvard graduate. "We need people," Anderson says, "with talent, people who can stand the physical game and basic insanity of campaigning, and who can deal with the candidate." Fallows, he adds...

Author: By Charles E. Shepard, | Title: The Education of Jim Fallows | 10/25/1976 | See Source »

...Brown administration is also undeniably concerned with the publicity the university is receiving and will often go to inordinate lengths to make sure the strike is placed in "proper perspective" by the press. Following the arrests of the students, for instance, Robert Reichley, vice president for university relations, appeared on local TV news programs and declared that it was not student actions that ended the embarrassing strike; both publicly and privately, the Brown administration has fostered the notion of "community" as a buttress against the bad press generated by student actions on behalf of the workers. Many students--including Nathan...

Author: By Richard S. Weisman, | Title: Brown on Trial: 'We're going to resist them every inch of the way.' | 10/22/1976 | See Source »

...because none of us could possibly have had any point of reference to compare it to anything else. From that moment on, however, the child is a member. He knows the description of the world; and his membership becomes full-fledged...when he is capable of making all the proper perceptual interpretations which, by conforming to that description, validate...

Author: By Ruth Hubbard, | Title: With Will to Choose | 10/19/1976 | See Source »

...blunt old Republican. Young Democrat with twelve years' experience in elective office; old Republican with none. In the race between the Democratic transplanted Easterner and the Japanese-American-immigrant Republican, charges of racism are hurled-at the immigrant. Young Democrat is generally somber-suited, dark-tied, prim and proper. His opponent's jaunty tarn o'shanter has become a symbol for the unconventionality he savors in both dress and speech. It could happen only in California, and whether the voters will opt for slight quirkiness or substantial blandness in the final scene may not be known until...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CALIFORNIA: Hayakawa v. Tunney | 10/18/1976 | See Source »

...less likely candidate for stardom in Boston than Steven James Grogan would be hard to find. Bostonians, proper or improper, are accustomed to outsize heroes with outsize skills-Ted Williams, Bill Russell, Bobby Orr and, yes, even Jim Plunkett. The quiet, country-bred young man from Ottawa, Kansas (pop. 11,000), resembles none of these demigods; yet he has already begun to exert his own spell on the Hub, its congeries of suburbs and that state of mind known as New England. For beneath his placid exterior, a competitive fire burns. Says Patriot Coach Chuck Fairbanks, who saw it early...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Just Doing What I Know Best' | 10/18/1976 | See Source »

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