Word: warrantedly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Corsair II) in the course of covering civil and military aerospace for TIME. Besides reporting for the arms trade story, both Hannifin and Kane contributed to an analysis of the new electronic weapons, which may radically alter the dynamics of future wars and which, we feel, warrant a separate story in this week's Science section...
...their primary goal of creating suspense. The average whodunit (and the Orson Welles festival has its share of those) is almost by definition something you'd never want to see twice--or at least not until you'd forgotten it. But the first time around, anyway, such films may warrant taking out your pipe and putting on you deerstalker...
...sport. It is not easy to be a serious athlete and a serious student--every Harvard-Radcliffe athlete cares about his sport. If his sport happens to be an unusual one, not played or followed by many other people, or not a real money-maker, it nevertheless does not warrant this sort of demeaning response. The best sort of sports reporting is not governed by what the fans think of sports, especially fans such as those who throng to the Harvard/Yale football game as much to be seen at the game as to see the game. The best sort...
Doomsday Prospect. Under close analysis, the Kissinger statement did not seem to warrant such a reaction. In a sense, it merely expressed the obvious. It is hard to see how Kissinger could have ruled out military action absolutely under any circumstances. A sovereign power must retain the option of using force if and when its survival, or that of its essential allies, is at stake. "Any individual, or country, carries in the back of his mind the idea that if his life or livelihood is threatened, he will use all the means at his disposal to protect himself," observed Harvard...
...many grounds--Constitutional, historical and political--for opposing Kissinger's attack on Congress that it is difficult to choose among them. The Constitution--which gives it the power to vote foreign-affairs appropriations and to declare the wars Kissinger's foreign policy is designed to provoke--is Congress's warrant for "interfering" with foreign policy. And Congress is closer to being right than the president or the secretary of state on the foreign-policy that gave rise to Kissinger's denunciation...