Word: steadfastedly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Reporter magazine presented a steadfast face to the world. From the day it started in 1949, its standards of journalism were high, its contributors stayed close to the facts, and it enthusiastically accepted the postwar role of the U.S. as a world arbiter and standard-setter. As the years rolled by, how ever, many liberals became disenchanted with U.S. action as international policeman or bored with straight reporting and turned instead to the more sensational outpourings of the New Left. But the Reporter, personified by Publisher Max Ascoli, never wavered. Last week it paid the price of consistency by announcing...
...such a situation the duty of the steadfast follower of the Maoist Line is to break with all forms of reaction and revisionism. The "inevitable victory of People's War" is impossible unless there is an unobscured confrontation between the foreign oppressors and a People's Liberation Army inspired by Chairman Mao's thought and free from revisionist influence...
...South Korea. After a spate of Korean protest demonstrations, editorials and official statements, the U.S. dispatched Troubleshooter Cyrus Vance to Seoul as a special presidential emissary empowered to discuss the "grave threat" from the North. In addition, Johnson went out of his way to laud "this steadfast ally" when he made his request for special military aid to South Korea. By week's end the handholding operation appeared to have been successful, and the U.S. was able to get on with the exasperating task of dealing with the other Korea...
IGNORING two protest letters from a cluster of usually pro-Administration academics, Secretary of State Dean Rusk has remained steadfast in his refusal to grant Yugoslavian author Vladimir Dedijer a visa to teach at M.I.T. this spring. Rusk's ban is clearly a frightened, anti-Communist reaction, revealing more clearly than ever how vulnerable the Administration considers itself on the Vietnam...
...Congressional approval. But now he must either get Congress to adopt a random selection plan before June or devise a stop-gap system for this year that is both equitable and looks so little like a lottery that it will pass inspection by the House Armed Services Committee, a steadfast opponent of random selection...