Word: admit
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...last week he could claim that he's already won the contest that matters, to the extent that "others are stealing my ideas." Just when President Clinton and Republicans in Congress admit they are unable to cut the budget through negotiations, Forbes arrives and proposes to do it by fiat. Now, says Jack Kemp, who was only one of the many voices last week calling for a brand-new tax system, "the whole debate is how low to have the tax-rate system, how fair it should be." The issue reached critical mass on Wednesday, when Gramm unveiled...
...COLUMN ON UTAH REPRESENTAtive Enid Greene Waldholtz [PUBLIC EYE, Dec. 25-Jan. 1], Margaret Carlson accuses Waldholtz of admitting that she "lied" about the source of campaign funds and of having "larceny in her heart." These characterizations are absolutely false and meanspirited. Waldholtz appeared before the press and answered every question posed to her about her 1994 congressional campaign and related issues. She absolutely did not admit she lied about a transaction that enabled her to contribute what she believed to be personal funds to her campaign, nor was she "a knowing beneficiary of the con artist--who knows...
During oral argument, Deputy Solicitor General Paul Bender grabbed the rapt attention of the Justices when he harked back to a certain law school that refused to admit women, claiming they would run in tears from the lecture hall, unable to cope with the harsh Socratic method, the legal version of hazing. Five of the Justices recognized the school as their alma mater, Harvard Law School. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, one of the first women to get there, seemed to hold back a smile. VMI and the Citadel might want to start building those women's bathrooms...
...admit candidates and not schools," says Fitzsimmons. "The point is to get all the students, whether they're the first [from their school] to apply to Harvard or the 95th this year, who are legitimate applicants...
...these large gestures of nature are apolitical. The weather in its mirabilis mode can, of course, be dragged onto the op-ed page to start a macro-argument about global warming or a micro-spat over a mayor's fecklessness in deploying snowplows. Otherwise, traumas of weather do not admit of political interpretation. The snow Shinto reintroduces an element of what is almost charmingly uncontrollable in life. And, as shown last week, surprising, even as the priests predict it. This is welcome--a kind of ideological relief--in a rather stupidly politicized society living under the delusion that everything...