Word: belonged
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...want to abolish the federal Work-Study program. These devastating proposals ominously recall a satirical piece that appeared on this page ("Contract With Harvard," Dartboard, Jan. 6, 1995). "The administration has cut 50 percent of aid allotments in order to trim Harvard's deficit...Sadly, Work-Study jobs now belong to the past," the piece joked...
Contrary to popular belief, about 80% of those who get the minimum (or less) belong to families with combined incomes above the poverty line (currently $15,627 for a family of four) and thus are not defined as poor...
Salk and vaccine. the words somehow belong together-like Fleming and penicillin or Einstein and relativity. So when Dr. Jonas Salk, the developer of the first effective vaccine against polio, announced eight years ago that he was coming out of retirement to tackle AIDS, many people cheered-especially the growing numbers of patients infected with hiv. Who better to lead the charge against the current plague than the conqueror of an infamous childhood scourge? Within the scientific community, though, there was more doubt than expectation. AIDS was a tougher target than polio, and few experts believed that Salk's approach...
...have a right, even a duty, to remain. ``If all of us fled Germany,'' says Shlomit Tulgan, a student in Berlin, ``then Hitler would have achieved his desire of making Germany free of Jews. We can't let that happen.'' Serge Klarsfeld, the French Nazi hunter, believes the Jews belong in Eastern Europe despite the Holocaust. ``To live in Cracow, in Prague or in Budapest is not to live with assassins. It is to live with the memory of Jewish life that once flourished there...
Because sororities cannot advertise on campus, virtually all of the 44 members of Theta and the 17 women who belong to Delta Gamma say they found out about their sororities by word of mouth. Many members were friends before they joined. Sorority sisters tend to live in the same houses--predominantly river houses such as Eliot, Lowell and Mather--and tend to be upper-class students...