Word: flawlessly
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Last week, as he had on six previous occasions, John F. Kennedy displayed near-flawless skills at a press conference...
...excellence of last night's show depended primarily upon the skill of the principal characters. Actually, the show is Joey's, and the profiency of Richard France in that role was the most important element. His flawless stage presence and general savoir faire held the production together, and seemed to impart to the other players the confidence they so surely indicated. Mr. France played the part to at; his voice was serviceable and clear, his dancing dazzling...
...This flawless (because meaningless) fragment of prose is offered as a parody of the once-famed gibberish of Gertrude Stein, and is the work of an unknown writer, Arthur Flegenheimer. It is one of the more recondite items in this anthology of Dwight Macdonald, critic, polemicist and New Yorker staff writer. To see just how recondite it is, the reader must not miss the footnote, in which it is disclosed that the obscure Flegenheimer is Mobster Dutch Schultz, and that the Stein "parody" is a police stenographer's transcript of his dying delirium. Such thimbleriggery is a fair sample...
...entered the contest with something approaching high hopes, despite the Bulldogs' unblemished record and a Harvard season that had not lived up to glorious expectations. But Yale was just too big, too strong, too good for a Crimson squad that made too many mistakes. It would have taken a flawless and inspired performance for Harvard to win, and the varsity--even with Charlie Ravenel back and surprisingly effective--couldn't come up with this kind of game...
...victory then was due in large part flawless spinnaker work of Horn, John Kimbell, and George who will be at the lines today and . Although second or third boat windward mark, the varsity swept the fleet on the downwind leg six and then hung on to its lead for victory...