Word: expounded
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...young as I used to be." With that reluctant admission, Syndicated Columnist Joseph Alsop took off for Europe last week on an indeterminate leave of absence. His abrupt departure seemed surprising in a man who has always relished the partisan enthusiasms of a presidential campaign, the chance to expound for his readers on every facet of American politics. But this year, said Joe in his final column, "the campaign has been a dreary business." And in a letter to his syndicate, he explained that the dreariness was as much in him as it was on the hustings...
...traveled to South America, Europe, Africa, and Southeast Asia. He has supported Kennedy regularly but is anxious to be free from the uniform Democratic opinions which the Administration and leadership of the Foreign Affairs Committee encourage. This requires a steady, often taxing, effort to develop and expound his own positions. Church's record on domestic legislation is spotty and difficult to classify. On most subjects his public statements have not been extensive, but his voting inclines toward the left...
...could point out that the theory of free-enterprise-competitive economy in the U.S. has suffered considerable erosion, and that "personal freedom and liberty" may owe their survival to other than economic factors. (In denying this, the bill itself seems to expound a modified Marxist view of history...
...roams his curfewed capital in the early hours of the morning visiting bakeries "to taste the people's bread." He engages in talks with the goatskin-clad poor who live in reed huts on the mud flats of Baghdad's Tigris river. He loses no opportunity to expound on the mystic ideals of "Arab brotherhood," and has even re-established politely formal relations with the U.A.R., whose rulers, not long ago, stood accused in Iraqi public opinion of having engineered the attempt to kill...
...that parliamentarianism only defines the rules of political decision making, and as such has no intrinsic normative value. Once one of us was invited to attend a discussion meeting of a few young bureaucrats from a certain ministry. There he had the frightfully uncomfortble experience of listening to them expound the notion of the inherent inefficiency of the parliamentary system. They exhibited a peculiar combination of Marxist-Leninist contempt for parliamentarianism as a bourgeois facade with the impatient frustration of bureaucrats at the irritating inefficiency of the parliamentary procedure...