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

...into the fray after weeks of backroom negotiations between Giscardians and Gaullists failed to produce a compromise on a candidate. Calling Ornano's candidacy already a failure, Chirac said he was offering his own "so that the capital of France does not run the risk of falling into Socialist-Communist hands." The logic convinced no one. Premier Raymond Barre, visibly angered, charged that Chirac's move would sow such political confusion in the ranks of the majority that his economic-recovery program would be "compromised." Added Centrist Leader Jean Lecanuet: "Far from strengthening the majority, Mr. Chirac...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE,ITALY: A Duel over City Hall | 1/31/1977 | See Source »

...chrissakes--whoosh! All whisked away like lumps of hair and grease in the Draino commercials, sold off to some Australian. Not since young Citizen Hearst blew out of California 80 years ago to buy, with his daddy's considerably-more-than-30-pieces of blood-stained silver money, a socialist German-language newspaper and start the Spanish-American War has New York faced such a challenge from the West. Things fall apart. Now what rough beast with the legs of a kangaroo, the body of a killer bee, and the shrewdness of a platypus slouches towards Gotham to be born...

Author: By Joseph Dalton, | Title: Killer Kangaroo Ravages New York | 1/17/1977 | See Source »

...through the Depression, Fraser recalls hopping aboard slow-moving railroad gondolas to knock off a few chunks of coal to carry home for heating. After graduating from high school in Detroit, he went to work at Chrysler's De Soto plant and, faithful to his father's socialist leanings, quickly drew notice as a union agitator. By age 26, he was president of his local, where he tried to boost membership by serving beer; at 30, he was an international representative; by 34, he had caught the eye of Reuther, who took him on as an administrative assistant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Fraser a Shoo-in | 1/17/1977 | See Source »

...town, St. Louis. Six years later, when that marriage broke up ("It turned out we had only one interest in common," she explains), Rosemary was left with two sons and two daughters to support on her $4,200 salary as a typist. In 1969, in the face of a socialist takeover of Ceylon, her parents fled the island with only ? 100, giving Rosemary two more dependents. At 37, the rich girl from Ceylon was on her uppers in Fairfield...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Rosemary's Babies | 1/17/1977 | See Source »

Thus sale of part of the government's interest probably will make little or no difference in the way BP operates. Why, then, is the left wing so angry? Because the sale violates socialist ideology, which calls for the nationalization of more, not less, of British industry. The relative success of BP also dramatizes the value of letting proficient managers alone. Any attention focused on BP inevitably brings to mind the contrasting inefficiency of businesses controlled by the government in fact as well as name, such as the National Coal Board and the British Steel Corp...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OIL: Selling a Stake in a Big Sister | 1/10/1977 | See Source »

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