Word: echoings
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...addition, while the University is at least consistent in its attention to student and parent protestors alike, we are disappointed that it has failed to address their concerns. When parents (or, in Harvard-speak, "potential donors") begin to echo their children's opinions, it is high time that the University begin to listen...
...alleged biases of standardized tests than we invest in improving our children's scores. I suspect it's because we're afraid that the racists are right when they claim that our kids can't cut it intellectually, so why bother trying. That's nonsense, of course--an echo of the sense of inferiority that afflicted blacks during the bad old days of Jim Crow. But despite our growing affluence and our gains from the civil rights movement, a lot of African Americans seem to have been unable to put those nagging racial self-doubts behind them. In my opinion...
Students gathered last night in an Emerson lecture hall to hear the stories of students who have suffered from eating disorders, at an event sponsored by Eating Concern Hotline Outreach (ECHO...
...such a gift to be offered these stories," said Sheila Reindl, a Bureau of Study Counsel moderator and ECHO advisor, as one panelist paused to regain composure. "These are fresh stories. They're not canned...
...salvaging an deal to tighten controls on Iraq's access to weapons is about the best Washington can hope for. After all, the success of sanctions depends less on the demeanor of Congress than on the actions of Iraq's neighbors, where the Republican hard line finds very little echo. Powell will point to the agreement by Syria's President Bashar Assad to stop paying Baghdad directly for oil pumped through his country as a sign that Saddam's neighbors are ready to play ball if they believe Washington is pursuing a sound strategy. The problem, of course, is that...