Word: vitalize
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Implacable Struggle. On the atomic bomb, as on every other vital issue, Moscow is governed by Lenin's dictum: "Victory over the bourgeoisie is impossible without a long, persistent, desperate life and death struggle: a struggle which requires persistence, discipline, firmness, inflexibility and concerted will power...
This implies a paternalistic (or authoritarian) society in which the only vital components are men and land. Says Chiang: "The economic duties of the Government are twofold: to satisfy the people's wants, and at the same time restrict them. The former involves positive support, the latter precautionary control. . . . The application of these principles in social, political and economic organization will result in correct systems and policies...
...Congress carries out the demands of the President to interfere unilaterally, then the significance of the victory in World War II is not that the world received another chance to establish universal peace, but that this has become the American Century whose sole vital activity--even to the point of war consists in preventing it from becoming the Russian. With faith in the United Nations, for whose creation we are so largely responsible, the United States can not only help to solve the present tragic dilemma of the Greek people, but to revive the guttering hopes of the peoples...
...Lucius D. Clay, newly-appointed dynamic Commander of American forces in Europe, arrived today in Moscow from Berlin at 2:45 P.M. (6:45 A.M. E.S.T.) today to strengthen Marshall's hands in the vital talks...
...baring his economic fangs to the extent of a four month quasi-embargo on the expert of vital foodstuffs to Bolivia, Argentina's dictator, Juan D. Peron, has succeeded in sweating an important trade contract out of mineral-rich Bolivia and has added another balky satellite to his growing sphere of influence. The pact was ostensibly signed in an aura of good will and mutual agreement, but actually was achieved through a complete strangulation of Bolivian economy. Dependent on Argentina for ninety percent of its wheat and sixty percent of its meat quota, the newly democratic government unwisely flaunted...