Word: domaines
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...Faith and Works You need to go back 100 years, to Alfred Deakin, to find a prime ministerial aspirant who has put so many ideas and policy positions into the public domain. Only a few of those ideas are new, original or likely to be coming to a bureaucracy any time soon, but they're out there - in Latham's books, pamphlets, speeches, newspaper columns and correspondence - and it's been a great career move. One disadvantage of that fertility, though, is that he can spread too many seeds, too many messages. Is he for the free market...
...game started, junior goalie Robbie Burmeister swam out to the goal, propelled himself up out of the water and slapped the top crossbar of the net. The sound resonated through Blodgett Pool, warning the other team that he was ready for it to try and invade his domain...
...personal life coach in New York City: "Home has become one more place where men feel they cannot succeed." For as much as women desire and demand their husbands' assistance in floor waxing and infant swaddling, many men complain that their wives refuse to surrender control of the domestic domain and are all too adept at critiquing the way their husbands choose to help out. Haltzman, who gathers research on husbands through his SecretsOfMarriedMen.com website, points out that "there are a lot of things men do that women don't define as contributing to the household...
...days of walking down Wall Street, I realized that I had no hope of blending in. Quickly, it became clear to me that the street where the Great White Men—George Washington and Alexander Hamilton—were inaugurated and buried, respectively, was still the domain of white men of questionable greatness. In New York’s financial district, I was a woman in a place run by men and for men: the cigar-smoking, Wall Street Journal-toting men who think green and carry themselves with a self-importance that makes the Harvard man look, well...
Harvard has radically changed over the past 30 years, but the way it is viewed has not. Harvard students still take the rap for an era when the Yard was the exclusive domain of Andover, Exeter and St. Paul’s graduates. And while the actual students these days might not be as arrogant, conceited and haughty as they once were, many people’s opinions have yet to change...