Word: bloomingly
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...appreciate the efforts of the administration to search for what they firmly believe to be a superbly qualified, award-winning professor to replace Symonds. But as leading student dramaturges point out, their decision only serves to cripple an aspect of campus life that has been trying so hard to bloom for the past 13 years...
Right now the powers-that-be seem to consist of Allan Bloom supporters who believe that the standard of American excellence is the canon of white American history, literature and culture. Why should anyone accept this kind of standard, which creates SAT analogies like "'dividends is to shareholders' and 'checkmate is to chess?'" The debate has raged back and forth among educators and policy makers for many years now. The conclusion that they have come to is that a change in the content of the SAT is necessary and beneficial. It will help more than it will hinder...
This increasing politicization of sexual relations between the sexes has also been attacked by Allan Bloom whose elegy mourning the death of Eros, was posthumously published in last Sunday's New York Times Magazine. Bloom's piece blithely ignored the fact that all human relations, even intimate ones, are colored by Machiavellian power struggles, which admittedly, vary in terms of scale and intensity...
Suddenly, sniper bullets spit into the dirt along the top of the trench. Down below the ridge, plum orchards in spring bloom conceal the Muslim lines. Exploding artillery shells trigger small avalanches along the rain-loosened earth walls. A young Serb slides into the trench, out of breath from his dash across a meadow of buttercups pocked by mortar craters. He has a question to ask that is important enough to risk his life. "Why does the world want to destroy us?" he wants to know. "We are victims...
...that is easy and inexpensive to maintain and not particularly vulnerable to the vagaries of the weather. Barbara Humberger of Austin began going native in 1989 after an unusual cold spell killed many of the nonnative shrubs that surrounded her lakeside home. Her property shimmers with blackfoot daisies that bloom from early spring until the first fall frost. UCLA neurologist Andrew Charles wanted an attractive but drought-resistant cover for the steep hillside behind his house. His solution was to plant deep-rooted California lilacs punctuated by the orchid-like blossoms of sticky monkey flowers...