Word: belonged
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...business, law or medicine, public service or the arts, and whether you see yourself working in Bangkok, Boston or Boise, your choices will not only include, but must certainly take into account, the international marketplace of the 21st century. Your products, your colleagues, and your responsibilities will all belong to this worldwide, increasingly interdependednt and interconnected network. It will, in fact, become ever more difficult to create and manage a professional career that is not international in at least one or several of its dimensions. And so, it is now not simply a question of choosing an international career...
...security. problems. Putting all bathrooms under lock and key falls under the category of fixing the symptom, not the problem. If the Yard is to remain an open and public place, the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) will have to be more aggressive keeping away those who do not belong...
...snakes). It hasn't been easy, he admits. Even the saintly Albert Schweitzer, who went out of his way to avoid stepping on bugs, didn't hesitate to shoot the beings whose distinguishing characteristics are a slithering gait, a forked tongue and hypodermic-needle fangs that can (if they belong to Australia's cobra-like inland taipan) deliver enough venom in a single bite to kill 200,000 mice...
Last week the case took a bizarre turn when Barbara Zack Quindel, the federal officer who monitored the taxpayer-financed election, resigned after she learned that the Teamsters had arranged to make a contribution to the New Party, a small political organization to which she and her husband belong. The contribution was personally approved by Carey in March just as Quindel began her investigation. Eventually, Quindel ordered a new election, declaring at the time that Carey had no knowledge of the myriad schemes to fund his campaign, and said he could run again. Three weeks ago, she announced that...
...among the terminally ill? Would this new right provide a greater degree of control and freedom to a dying individual, or would it only weaken our society's respect for life? Can alternative approaches to dying allow one to experience a good death? More fundamentally, do our lives ultimately belong to us or to the larger community in which we are deeply rooted...