Word: affectively
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...have in the past. What will you do? YUDHOYONO: I've asked the relevant ministers to conduct an analysis of the impact of higher fuel costs on the subsidy policy and the 2005 budget. If the subsidies seriously burden the budget, then I will set new policies that might affect the price of certain fuels, particularly those not consumed by the poor. Kerosene and diesel would still be subsidized, while premium gasoline would no longer be subsidized. Clearly our budget has to be fiscally sustainable, but the poor also need to be protected. Whatever the policy taken, the poor will...
...Professor of Economics Claudia D. Goldin wrote in an e-mail that she thinks political beliefs do not affect professors’ classes...
...with a slightly hostile glare and energetic hands, imbuing his rambling with all the energy of a repressed fancier of a dead society, with a frigid wife and a job whose benefit he begins to doubt. As Alan, Fishburn is a worthy foil, with a mournful stare and an affect that switches like a light between cold disengagement and eager emotion. In their scenes together, Dysart’s fight to overpower Alan’s hostility to his questioning with a somewhat dubious methodology of hypnosis, “truth drugs,” and leading questions becomes...
...results of this election will affect you, in the short- and long-term. Policies pertaining to the economy, health care, foreign affairs, social issues and education will have an immediate impact on you as a young person. Debt for college students is increasing as tuition rises and financial aid lags behind. Young people are more likely than the general population to be jobless and 30 percent of young people lack health insurance, the highest percentage of any age group. Furthermore, when it comes to war and national security, 70 percent of enlisted personnel are 30 years old or younger, testifying...
Sure, the athletes say they don’t mind, that they’re used to it by now, that it doesn’t affect their early-season performance. That may be true, and it may not be, but that question is irrelevant. Far more important is why Harvard, proud home of the nation’s largest Division I athletics program, consistently short changes those who provide that extra feather in President Lawrence H. Summers?...