Word: bold
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...leaders of the Republican Party in 1994 were bold, passionate visionaries with the courage to go to the people with a clearly defined agenda. Issues and principles drove them. Today, their agenda stretches no further than the next election. The same people who were elected on a platform of change have become the establishment bulls who fight change today. The 1994 Republicans advocated balanced budgets. Today, they defend deficits. The 1994 Republicans wanted to eliminate government programs. Today, they propose and create them. The 1994 Republicans held themselves and Congress to a higher ethical standard. Today, they seem more interested...
...College graduates should be knowledgeable about the seminal issues that face their generation. Yet members of the Harvard community have voiced concerns about the particulars of the committee’s proposal, most notably the balance of the 10 required fields, which we believe requires further examination.The report is bold, visionary, and innovative, particularly compared to the last general education report, which conspicuously lacked any fundamental rationale. Whereas the previous report required students to take any three courses in three broad areas, the new report has tremendous focus. It proposes centering a Harvard education on courses that will provide relevant...
...which an alum or professor would have an additional edge. Someone who understands what Harvard has been in the past and how it got to where it is today will have a better idea of what Harvard needs for the future. They will also be well versed in the bold, trend-setting thinking that has dominated Harvard’s history...
...Jared Hickman said that Gilroy’s academic work drew him to the lecture. Gilroy is known for his theories on race, racism, and culture. His interests span a number of disciplines, ranging from literature to cultural history. Gilroy addressed an audience of around 60. “Bold as Love?” was the culminating lecture in a three-part series that recognizes individuals who have contributed significantly to African American life and culture. The event was co-sponsored by the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African and African American Research, the Department of African and African American...
...would require students to take courses on religion and U.S. history as part of a new set of 10 mandatory areas of study, started making waves across the nation yesterday. In an evening dispatch, The Associated Press called the task force’s recommendations “surprisingly bold.” And The Wall Street Journal gave prominent treatment to news of the proposal on its website...