Word: depart
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There are, however, several obstacles to careful analysis. First, little information on why people dislike or depart from Harvard exists. Most of this is not available to the public, since it is not very favourable to Exeter. Analysis must, therefore, begin and end with the opinions of those who know large numbers of Exeter students...
...Tamayo, who wears no political label, disagreed about art: Tamayo shied away from Rivera's hard-lined propagandist works, and Rivera had no love for Tamayo's warm-toned semiabstractions. For 20 years the two artists have exchanged few kind words. Last week Tamayo, 57, soon to depart for Puerto Rico and projects that may keep him away from Mexico for two years, decided to make peace with ailing Rivera, now 70. After an hour's hatchet-burying at Rivera's Mexico City home, Tamayo reported that they are still at odds over ideology...
Repudiating any thought of "bargaining" over Tunisia's loyalty to the West, Bourguiba said in his weekly radio broadcast: "The best proof that we did not want to depart from our position of wisdom is that even when our arms crisis was most acute, we negotiated with a Czech economic mission and did not even raise the question of arms." As for the "small quantity" of Egyptian arms, Bourguiba blandly said: "We accepted them as a fraternal gesture. The Egyptian offer helped us by its timeliness, but we know that Egypt herself is seeking arms for her own needs...
...will do no good, he said. His alert cops arrested 1,200 Hungarians in July, Marosan went on. At this point some students got up and left the hall. "Our ranks are becoming thinner, my young student friends," said Marosan. "It is just as well that they depart, one by one, because it is quite hopeless for them to create a scene. I should like to tell my young friends that October 23 is to be a working and school day. I shall come personally to the university to see that it is." With that, Marosan and Kadar, two bush...
Nothing is as it seems. He admires the West and progress. But the West's emissaries-an international aid mission-are uncomprehending and horrified by his tribe's backwardness, illiteracy and impractical preoccupation with poetry; civilization's missionaries depart, leaving behind two artificially inseminated ewes and predicting bigger and better herds, which the Falqani do not want. Throughout his country, Ghazan seems to see only a bizarre blend of ancient Eastern evils and too-hasty Westernization-hunger and corruption, opium smokers in grey flannel suits, profiteering officials who "displayed the refrigerator in their drawing room like...