Word: doubtedly
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...Shortly before Moulitsas?s speech, Joe Trippi gropes for the right metaphor, comparing politicians? courting of this nascent movement to the presidential primaries: ?No one wants to skip Iowa.? Yet the politicians especially seem to be figuring it out as they go along - fear of missing the boat outweighs doubt about its final destination. Clark gives his speech on American innovation to a well-attended science panel flanked by bloggers whose name recognition is high in this room and nowhere else. One of them is wearing a colorful, flowered hat. Clark's handler leans over: ?Ten days...
...generosity of the president’s office, which funded the event. While the dean’s office has agreed to fund the CEB (and, by extension, its concerts and fairs) for the next school year, the CEB’s future source of funds remains in doubt without long-term guarantees from the College and with the departure of University President Lawrence H. Summers, who has in the past pledged millions of his office’s dollars toward various undergraduate social initiatives. A pub in Loker Commons, a café in Lamont Library, and renovated student space...
...criticisms their paper has faced, Walt writes in an e-mail. They will also publish a revised version of their paper, he says.“Although there are a few places where we might word our arguments differently, the criticisms published to date have not cast serious doubt on the central findings of our paper,” Walt writes.But the volume of criticism to date suggests that many of their colleagues—both at Harvard and beyond—vehemently disagree.—Staff writer John R. Macartney can be reached at jmacartn@fas.harvard.edu...
...early phase of our review, some members of the Faculty, myself included, saw a simple distribution system as the best solution. (My one nagging doubt was that this kind of requirement is in place at Yale, the institution where “veritas” needs to be supplemented by “lux.”) In its most common form, the distributional scheme requires students to take courses in each of the three traditional divisions: the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences...
When the chapter in Harvard’s history about the presidency of Lawrence H. Summers is written, there is little doubt that much of it will focus on his top initiatives, his public image, his comments on women in science, and his battle with the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and subsequent resignation. I fear that some of the most important sides of his multifaceted presidency will be lost in an effort to dramatize an unquestionably tumultuous five years. In particular, the prejudice of history may overlook his tremendous commitment to undergraduates, an aria of Summers’ tragic...