Word: new-found
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Because the INS would no longer handle the individual applications, Simmons said the agency would concentrate on reviewing how the institutions carried out their new-found responsibilities...
...Women of the Year for 1975, the story declared: "It was not so much the Year of the Woman as the Year of Women-an immense variety of women altering their lives, entering new fields, functioning with a new sense of identity, integrity and confidence." Two years later, in its cover story on the National Women's Conference in Houston, TIME detected "a new-found confidence ... The women knew that their political skills were on trial, and they passed the test with flying colors." This week, in the aftermath of the defeat of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment, TIME...
Senior Norm Forbush, last year's leading scorer, attributes the Crimson's new-found success to the maturation of the freshmen...
Optimism in the face of harsh reality, then, is Reed's new-found philosophy. The singer constantly agonizes over "the world's impending storm" and "a world in a terrible state." But unlike his earlier works, a warm and positive feeling suffuses. The Blue Mask. Reed, a veteran of a difficult business and a difficult era, could easily have become a cynic with age. But instead of displaying unalloyed disgust, Reed confronts us with a touchingly realistic album that tempers anger with hope...
...complicated by an almost insatiable drive for democracy among a rank and file that had no experience with the democratic process. Most of the Solidarity activists were young. They were both angry and exuberant: bitter over the party's moral and material bankruptcy, giddy with the sense of new-found power. Their impatience for change fed radical tendencies opposed to Walesa's moderation. And those currents would grow stronger as the months went by with no improvement in the country's economic situation...