Word: commending
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...nine-year strike that began in 1967 and cost it 400,000 readers. Now the Herald Examiner's 170 editorial employees seem destined to play David to the Goliath Times (circ. 1.1 million), with its 850 staffers and annual profits of $200 million. Though the Herald has much to commend it, including playing up local stories and sometimes producing sprightlier writing than the Times, Hearst seems unsure what to do with its laggard child. Company officials, especially Robert Danzig, general manager of Hearst newspapers, are chronically indecisive about a redesign, despite having commissioned five prototypes over the past eight years...
...support and commend the "Harvard 7" and their fellow activists for their efforts in pressuring Harvard to divest its apartheidconnected holdings. The movement for change in South Africa is mounting daily. The South African government talks of reform, but has viciously repressed the growing movement for full economic and political rights. An estimated 24,000 South Africans are in detention--40 percent of them children. As President Reagan's special advisory committee on South Africa concluded earlier this year, "Negotiations between Blacks and whites in South Africa appear unlikely until a further combination of internal and external pressures raises...
...almost hear the practiced seducer's rationalization: "What's the harm? Everyone got what they wanted, didn't they?" Heaven help us; it's close to being true. May, whose painstaking ways and modest grosses do not usually commend her to the studios, gets to work in something near her best vein. Hoffman has a role nicely suited to the comic whine of his neuroses. Beatty, 50, has one in which his distracted air and his lack of traditional star presence can be made to look like modesty -- though at his age, his looks are no longer flawlessly tailored...
...writing to commend The Crimson and Michael Wall for his article on working class and low income students (12/18/86). Mr. Wall has made a good effort to capture the flavor of the experiences of these "less monied" individuals. Hopefully, the article will serve as a gentle reminder to those of us with money not to assume that everyone at Harvard-Radcliffe has similar financial backrounds, and that such differing backrounds translate into different values and ways of perceiving and experiencing the world...
...Harvard student of Chinese ancestry, I would like to comment on your recent article on Asian Americans at Harvard ("The Asian Quandary," October 27, 1986). First, I commend the article's author, David M. Lazarus, on the journalistic spirit in which he carried out his research. The issues of Asians Americans at Harvard are very broad and potentially controversial, yet any reader of his work can tell he made a sincere effort to objectively summarize the major idea of his topic...