Word: answering
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...said of Arafat. “And [Carter is] bouncing Yasser Arafat’s child on his knees and talking about how wonderful of a man he is.” After calling for “hostile questions” at the beginning of the question-and-answer session, Dershowitz was grilled on a range of issues—including an alleged lack of sympathy for Palestinians and a lack of respect for the former President. Dana A. Stern ’09, president of Harvard Students for Israel, said she was happy with Dershowitz?...
...members with the keys to hundreds of luxury vehicles for an initiation fee and annual dues that range from $7,000 to $22,700. "It just makes so much sense for anybody who is either passionate about cars or passionate about their image," notes Thorne. "It's the perfect answer to satisfy both those needs without the myriad hassles that come with car ownership...
...half seasons’ worth of loyal 24 viewing (as the hours pile up, I am forced to ask myself if maybe there was something more productive I could have done with this almost-week of my life than obsessively track the exploits of super-agent Jack Bauer. The answer, of course is no.) and a couple of seasons on the staff of the Greenwich Village Little League Cubs, I decided to enlist the opinions of several Harvard baseball players...
...possible to love the music without embracing the unconstructive images that it undoubtedly creates? The answer is a resounding yes; it just takes some perspective. Sure, some say hip-hop demeans women, bashes gays, and perpetuates negative black stereotypes. But it’s not real life, and most people realize this. Besides, we do have a way to make the stuff we don’t like go away. In the same way a frustrated Congress has the power to alter an unjust war by adjusting the President’s funds, we as consumers can make...
...born. With her father working for the U.S. government, Gay spent most of her childhood abroad in places as far away as Saudi Arabia. She later attended a New Hampshire boarding school, then studied economics at Stanford. While there, she first encountered the problem of finding the data to answer the questions she thought needed answering. “The challenge of relying on surveys done on the national population is that African Americans only make up 12 to 13 percent of the population,” Gay says. But colleagues praise Gay for gracefully navigatingunmarked territory...