Word: expertly
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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This is no doubt a very sensitive and difficult issue for any first-year at Harvard. Being a first-year myself, I am no expert, but I have experienced various forms of the two case scenarios. So here are some tips to help make things a little easier to deal with...
...That's a tenth [of a point deduction],"newly-minted skating expert Gondalfi said toRotondo...
...expert Diane Ring will arrive this fallform private practice in Washington, D.C., in anon-tenured faculty post. In addition, there aretwo non-tenured offers out to women, says Clark...
Koestenbaum, a graduate of Harvard, Princeton and now an assistant professor of English at Yale, makes no pretense of writing from an expert's perspective; yet the wealth of operatic knowledge that he displays is immense. Unlike the expert, who learns to love, Koestenbaum loves to learn all he can about the field. In a country where opera has been "validated" intellectually as a cultural institution worthy of serious study and where opera must rely on snob appeal to sell tickets, Koestenbaum's perspective is refreshing and appeals not only to those with an interest in gay studies but also...
...assume the planes do finally fly. What exactly will this latest expression of faux muscularity achieve? "Air power alone" won't end the war, says the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "It's bombing as therapy," says Michael Mandelbaum, a Johns Hopkins University foreign policy expert who advised Clinton during the campaign. "Therapy for us, that is; proof that we've done something at last -- even if the Serbs simply move their heavy weapons and strike elsewhere, or hunker down till the dust clears." Ground troops could settle the conflict, but Clinton has ruled them out. He says...