Word: chooseã
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...there is reason to believe that many homeless might actually go on to lead productive, normal lives under proper care.We also have to face the reality that many of our most desperately ill citizens have no chance of entering normal society again. But allowing them to “choose?? to wither away on the streets seems more like a cruel Darwinian ploy than a valid social policy for dealing with those who have no hope.Prior to the massive deinstitutionalization undertaken in the 1980s, the U.S. government acknowledged that it was our responsibility to ensure that mentally...
...Oshima ’08, a Russian-Japanese student at the College upon finding that the registration site identified him as Asian American. “I guess they chose whatever they needed more of.” But since when is an institution allowed to “choose?? a student’s race? Harvard proudly posts the class of 2008’s racial composition to incoming freshmen on the undergraduate admissions website. It celebrates the 8.9 percent African American, 4.1 percent Hispanic American, 3.1 percent Mexican American, 19.9 percent Asian American, and 1.1 percent...
...came to the more serious implications of the “partial-birth” ban, I also came relatively late to the realization that a woman’s right to an accessible, affordable abortion is no retro issue. The reality is the “right to choose?? doesn’t even exist yet for large demographics of poor and minority women. According to recent data published by the Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health and the Alan Guttmacher Institute, 87 percent of U.S. counties had no abortion provider in 2000. Consider this along with...
Faculty members are still allowed to select 10 percent of the seats in their sections—using any criteria they choose??and fill slots that open up after other students drop the course...
...mind that despite decades of similar fetus-flashing campaigns, 1.5 million American women continue to seek abortions each year.) Instead of a guilt contest, the debate is two-fold: it is first a policy debate at the state and national level over a woman’s right to choose??which is just that, her right to choose. More importantly, it is a movement to increase pre-natal, adoption and foster care awareness and services to American women. Every year there are three million unplanned pregnancies in America, half of which go to term, as HRL would like...