Word: soberly
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...present, however, we must consider what is presently correct. In the Spring, seersucker and cord jackets are both practical and eminently proper. Of late, the inexpensive blue denim jackets have become quite popular. There are also sober tan or grey gabardine suits, and for more formal occasions or chilly evenings, the ever-dependable grey flannel is unspeakably proper...
...took exception. The article, under the pen name Bernard Dorrity and the title "Let's Secede from Texas," described the state as a "geographical hemorrhoid." Its cotton land "is now poor and desolate," its grazing lands "worthless," its "mean, mangy and narrow" citizens are "boors when sober [and] downright dangerous when drunk." If Texas women "are pretty, they're Mexicans. If they look like horses, they're Texans . . ." Texas cowboys can't even ride horses; on the last U.S. equestrian Olympic team, the "members came from Connecticut, New Jersey and Pennsylvania...
...novelty, and the unknown always carries a certain amount of fear . . . Remember," he counseled, "that we do carry a tremendous responsibility. Any false step could mean disaster not only for us but for our friends. Possibly our friends would suffer even more than we ourselves . . . We must be sober and restrained in our national conduct...
Part of Western Europe's sober second thought was attributable to the on-the-spot explanations of U.S. policy by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who traveled 10,000 miles, through seven nations in ten days (see INTERNATIONAL). Dulles was also eminently successful in drawing signs of new unity out of Western Europe's bickering diversity. In capital after capital he managed to convey the urgent need for action, based not on U.S. threats but on an overriding identity of interests among all free nations...
...Netherlands village of Dubbeldam, a handful of sober, weary Dutchmen paused for a moment to stand bareheaded before a row of four rough wooden coffins, but there was little time for mourning. The very next night new gales whipped the swollen tides down the wind tunnel of the North Sea to rip new holes in weakened Dutch dikes and add still more victims to the 1,372 already dead in the floods...