Word: choses
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...carries huge risks. There is, however, broad agreement among Iran's leaders that they should develop all the civilian nuclear technology allowed under the Non-Proliferation Treaty - and that, of course, would create infrastructure that would give them the option of building nuclear weapons very quickly if they chose to. So the consensus is not to build weapons, but to build nuclear infrastructure that would give them the option of building weapons. Whether or not they do so will depend on how they perceive the threat environment they face, so here the emphasis on the military option being...
...parents aren’t like that.” Also, Student School Committee member Tsion Girum, a junior at Cambridge Rindge and Latin, said she was worried about the lack of student voice in the survey. “I have a sister who chose to attend private school and I chose to attend public school and our parents didn’t really have any input in our decisions,” she said. “It seems like you’re doing a parent survey when really parents don’t have that much...
...country would do—teach accountability. He punished players and his team not because he had to, but because he felt it was the right thing to do. At a time when it seems education is the last thing on the minds of most college coaches, Murphy chose to be a teacher, even if it cost his team in the standings. So while everyone else asks what went wrong in the world of Crimson football, I think Murphy’s handling of an unfortunate situation demonstrates the best of Harvard athletics, not the worst. The players made mistakes...
YALE HAS MADE a non-binding decision on early action: In a meeting last week, the school's board chose not to follow Harvard and Princeton in eliminating its early admissions program. But President Richard Levin tells the YDN: "That's not a final decision." Oh, the stress of college admissions...
...emotional estrangement from the U.S. now evident in Europe can't simply be wished away. It may transform itself into a "cafeteria Atlanticism" - wariness in general, coupled with recognition that there will be places both sides need to do business. When Blair chose to fight the anti-American mood inside the Labour Party at its annual conference last week, he picked for guest speaker the mayor of Los Angeles, Antonio Villaraigosa - a Hispanic environmentalist and public-transit advocate from a state that just passed into law a version of the Kyoto accords. By the time he finished, the delegates were...