Word: concurred
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Moreover, Ullman, Chandler and Levy all concur in their characterizations of Rubin as an "egalitarian manager" who aims to involve even the lowliest staffers in his policy decisions as part of a personalized modus operandi...
...plastic surgeons concur on theethical nature of using plastic surgery to succeedin business world. Some say the motive in seekingsuch surgery much be deeper than simply the urgeto get ahead...
...bill called for the council to "express its continued commitment to diversity in the undergraduate body and concur with the Harvard administration in supporting affirmative action as a means of furthering diversity...
...concur, then swing by The Harvard Bookstore this afternoon, March 13, at 3 p.m. for a reading/booksigning by Willard Van Orman Quine, Emerson Hall's own living legend. Quine (rhymes with wine) is one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th Century, as well as a sparkling prose stylist and extremely brilliant guy. Tune in the following Friday, same time, same place, for a reading/booksigning by Daniel Dennett, M.I.T. philosopher and author of (among other things) Consciousness Explained. Creep on out from behind the Veil of Ignorance and enjoy the philosophical treats the Square has to offer...
Skeptics respond that jailhouse conversions are both commonplace and not relevant in deciding who receives a pardon. And in spite of efforts to save her, it seems unlikely that either the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles or Governor George W. Bush, who must concur for a sentence to be commuted, will block her execution. Bush, a law-and-order Republican facing a re-election campaign this year, would seem to gain little politically by such a move. Moreover, there simply are not the requisite legal questions or doubts about her guilt that might prompt commutation. Pardon has never been...