Word: anew
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...include Georgetown University, which awarded the Edward Weintal Prize for distinguished reporting on U.S. diplomacy to Diplomatic Correspondent Strobe Talbott. The National Intelligence Study Center cited Associate Editor Edwin Warner for his Essay "Strengthening the CIA." The Atomic Industrial Forum honored Senior Writer George Church for his Essay "Looking Anew at the Nuclear Future." The White House News Photographers Association awarded its Presidential Class first prize to Dennis Brack's photo for TIME of the Carters visiting Japan. And spring is only half over...
...there are cases where judges must shoulder a still graver burden, for we must preserve the core of our heritage embodied in the Constitution. Our challenge is to pour into these ancient formulations the experience of each generation, to strike anew a balance between the necessities of state and the rights of the individual, between the security of the status quo and the aspirations of our minorities. Our tools are limited to reasoned elaboration, the collective wisdom of our founding fathers and the voice of an aroused conscience. We must strain our hearts and minds to apply the most enlightened...
While tackling the herculean tasks, capitalism must demonstrate anew the daring and flexibility that were once its hallmarks. Plainly, capitalism is not working well enough. But there is no evidence to show that the fault is in the system ? or that there is a better alternative. Though neither comfortable nor easy, free enterprise contains the protean potential that will be needed in the coming diffi cult years. For all its obvious blemishes and needed reforms, capitalism alone holds out the most creative and dynamic force that any civilization has ever dis covered: the power of the free, ambitious individual...
ARNOLD C. HARBERGER, chairman of the economics department at the University of Chicago, last week turned down President Bok's offer of the directorship of the Harvard Institute for International Development (HIID), leaving Bok to start the search process anew. This time around, Bok should do it right...
That was demonstrated anew last week in the South. After clobbering former Texas Governor John Connally in South Carolina, Reagan swept on to three more victories. The Californian's triumphs in Georgia and Alabama were not unexpected, but his margins were huge. Some 207,000 Republicans turned out in Alabama (compared with 53,000 in 1976) to give Reagan a 73% to 26% lead over the faltering Bush. In Georgia, Bush was battered even worse, losing to Reagan 73% to 13%. Even more significant, however, was Reagan's decisive majority in Florida, which has a Republican electorate that...