Word: accept
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...family life. Research done by French sociologist Christine Castelain Meunier has shown that fathers in the 30 to 40-year-old age range are less likely to be remote, disciplinarian figures than their predecessors: "These men spoke to the fetus, were present at the birth; they refuse to accept the idea of their children growing up without them." Professor Chaumier has noted an increasing emphasis on home life. He says "People withdraw into their family as the last bastion capable of giving meaning to their lives because they don't find much meaning elsewhere - not in politics, projects or work...
There's only one way to save Darfur: tell Sudan it can either accept the U.N. force or face war against the world's most powerful military alliance. Though the U.N. can't fight its way into Darfur, NATO can. If it does, al-Bashir could end up following Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic and Liberia's Charles Taylor to a war-crimes trial at the Hague. Confronted with that prospect, al-Bashir might conclude that a U.N. peacekeeping force...
...Even Tami had her emotional limits, though. Down the hall, a 22-year-old specialist named James Fair wouldn't accept the loss of his two hands. He had also lost both eyes when a bomb he tried to defuse exploded, and nerve sensations tricked him into thinking he still had hands. He kept asking Tami to pass him objects. "James, you don't have any hands," she'd reply. He'd refuse to believe her, demanding next that she hold one of his stumps...
...representing yourself, you’re representing the university, you’re representing the football program. And therefore you have to understand that there’s going to be greater scrutiny, that you will be held to a higher standard, and if you do not accept that, you should not play.”***For Harvard, now is finally time for a different kind of scrutiny, the kind involving thousands of spectators on New England Saturday afternoons. If nothing else, it’s clear that the offseason has created an intense desire to return to the field...
...them volunteer, about one hour a week. Only 2% of students apply to 12 or more colleges, and only 150 of the nation's 3,500 colleges are so selective that they turn down over half their applicants. There are actually tons of college slots: 44% of colleges accept every single applicant. Some graduates do move home after college, but more 18-to-34-year-olds lived at home during the 1980s than do so today. Most families in America aren't doing too much for their children. They're doing everything they can, and it's just barely enough...