Word: vigorously
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Editorial Boldness. Houstonians have learned to expect outspokenness from the Press, a paper that has little to lose and much to gain from piping up. The Press's editorial vigor gains extra measure from the timidity of the Chronicle and the Post...
...innovators." Under either Kennedy or Nixon, one ingredient of the Western alliance would soon be missing: the so-I-told-Winston and remember-back-in-Africa camaraderie that has linked Ike with De Gaulle and Macmillan. But almost everybody seemed ready and eager to trade old palships for new vigor. Declared Britain's Manchester Guardian hopefully: "Whatever happens, both the Los Angeles and Chicago conventions must give America's friends the feeling that they are on the move...
Only college theatre can save the contemporary American stage from lethargy and stagnation, a group of distinguished panelists agreed Tuesday. By trying out new plays, by "pushing the boundaries of theatre farther out," and by "shocking" people, undergraduate drama will add vigor to modern theatre, a vigor currently lacking...
...history." Glowed the Indianapolis News: "A forceful leader, a hard campaigner, and an articulate speaker." The Denver Post lauded Nixon's "political skill," the Christian Science Monitor his "depth of thinking," the St. Paul Dispatch his "ability to unify divergent groups," the Portland Oregonian his "experience, vigor, intelligence...
...Defense Department that Military Air Transport traffic move over the certificated airlines at tariff rates, eliminating the ruinous practice of cutthroat bidding [July 18]. Only with this type of courageous leadership can the CAB fulfill its responsibility for developing an economically sound airlines system with the health and vigor to serve the country's civil and military needs...