Word: anew
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...smokestack was the dummy? (The fourth.)" And the tragedy furnishes social historians with a cutaway of Edwardian strata: "Should normal Class Precedence prevail," the crew wondered, "or the rule of 'Women and children first'?" Last year the Titanic's wreckage was spotted on the Atlantic floor, and speculation began anew. Could the accident have been avoided? Why did so many lifeboats leave only half filled? One fact is certain: unlike the ship, the legend refuses to sink...
...between public and private acts were increasingly clouded last week in the wake of the downed aircraft. At week's end new documents from the plane linked Co-Pilot William Sawyer Jr. to flights to American military bases in the U.S., Central America and the Caribbean. The evidence suggested anew that the final mission of the C-123K was more than a purely private matter...
...much as he does foreign condemnation -- or more. It was Solidarity's emergence as a rival to the Communist hierarchy that led to the imposition of martial law in December 1981 and a ban on union activity. By its sullen response to Solidarity's latest initiative, the government showed anew that the official party line is simply not open to question...
President Reagan said his administration had known that American citizens and private groups were trying to help antigovernment rebels in Nicaragua but he denied anew that the plane had any connection to the U.S. government...
Merengue technique involves no free-form violence, like slam dancing, and no shin-splinting fanciness, as in the mambo. It is less taxing than the tango, which caught on anew with the Broadway success of Tango Argentino, a show that spawned a fast-stepping tour and any number of gift certificates for dancing lessons. "Merengue's not a real complicated step pattern," says Lynne Frazier of the Arthur Murray Dance Studio in Burlingame, Calif. "You're not fighting to keep up with your feet...