Word: dared
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...commitments and concerns would know that she herself would have been honored to hear those commitments and concerns raised up at her funeral before the whole nation. Mrs. King died after a life of seeking justice, right thinking, care for the poor and disenfranchised, and peace. I dare say that President Carter, President Clinton, Rev. Lowrey, and many other speakers were far better acquainted with Mrs. King and her hopes and dreams than President Bush could ever be, and spoke more fervently about those dreams than Mr. Bush is capable of doing. Those whom Mr. Bartenstein criticizes were there...
...sets himself apart by being more personal than most people would dare to be in front of 800 people. He tells stories about his love life and his days as a Harvard undergrad. He tells jokes. He earnestly invokes “Chicken Soup for the Soul.” His demeanor is humble but authoritative; his points are delivered with tense conviction. He often recounts stories from his days at Harvard and gives examples that involve Harvard-specific phenomena like first-year blocking...
...Double Dare. Roundhouse. Clarissa Explains it All. If Nickelodeon didn’t actually raise a lot of today’s American college students, it certainly played the role of our zany uncle. Most of the live-action Nick shows of our childhood have one thing in common: they were filmed at Orlando’s Universal Studios—a crazy blue-and-orange building with a green-slime fountain. But thanks to the popularity of Nickelodeon’s cartoons and a shift to filming in smaller New York and Los Angeles studios, Nickelodeon closed the iconic...
...Swann, however, felt much the same way following Super Bowl X. "I would dare say that 30 years ago, few people would have said that Lynn Swann would be running for governor one day," said Swann. "I certainly didn't know it at the time." The important thing is, virtually every Steelers fan knows...
...diplomatic and economic pressure doesn't work, though, the game will reach a point at which Israelis are prepared to act-with or without their allies. "We dare not let our children live under the shadow of a nuclear Iran," argues Lerman. "At that point all options will be on the table." The alternative, says Yiftah Shapir, "is to come to terms with a nuclear Iran. Absent change we may have to face that reality...