Word: accomplishements
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...education. Ibrahim Musa Kuala Lumpur I am very frustrated with the way Pakistanis are protesting against the cartoons. No one has a right to burn someone else's property. Some people are urging the boycott of all products from European countries. Do any of those means of protest actually accomplish anything? The real solution would be not boycotting products but producing them in the first place. Just imagine if Pakistan were supplying medicines to Scandinavian countries and could withhold the supplies in protest. Muslims must become independent of Europe by making themselves strong enough economically and technically. Noor Uddin Islamabad...
...truly wants his work to bring him commercial success. For lack of a better term, we can call them “the pre-professionals.”He is currently completing two scripts to submit to Hollywood producers, an ambitious goal. Most Harvard screenwriters consider it an accomplishment to finish even one screenplay.Garrett D. Morgan ’08, a sophomore transfer from New York University (NYU), had a more uncommon motivation for getting started—he was born into the industry.“It was always a prevalent part of my life...
...vice chairwoman, has built a $100,000 house thanks to utility-funded tribal loans. "Traditional values don't put a roof over your head," she counters. Both say they want the same thing: for their children and grandchildren to live a good, safe life on the reservation. How to accomplish that is a dilemma of the nuclear...
...potential “rogue states” Iran and North Korea. To top it all, Osama bin Laden and senior leaders of al-Qaeda are widely believed to reside in northwestern Pakistan. An Islamic theocracy like Pakistan that is continually plagued by radical elements has much to accomplish before it can claim the status of an international leader, which India has earned...
...school professors’ brief “made it seem as though the constitutional challenge was weak.” And second, if the Harvard professors’ brief had succeeded, he said, “Congress would have been able to pass a law to accomplish what it actually wanted, and that would have brought the constitutional issue squarely back to the court.”But Professor of Law David J. Barron ’89, a former Crimson president who signed the amicus brief, disagreed, saying that he “thinks the court?...