Word: expressible
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...love teaching in general, so it was fun thinking, ‘If I were a teacher, how would I express this new subject?’” Catherine D. Cook ’12 said. “But we also had a lot of responsibility to be very serious and truthful about the matter...
...students at HLS to target Grace alone. Surely the individuals who leaked her private e-mail to the campus and to the press deserve significant condemnation. We are dismayed that her private e-mail was exposed in such a manner and hope that people are able to continue to express non-politically correct views (that do not constitute hate speech or pose a clear and present danger) in order to provoke discussion and awareness...
...College have offered them a mixture of motivation and gratification, Harvard’s writers say they do not feel that the College has been the most instrumental force behind their writing. These authors cite a diversity of influences that motivates them to put pen to paper and express themselves...
...visceral philosophy and general idea of how I would like to see the world, but I didn’t know quite how to express it,” he says, adding that he wanted to take a more proactive role when he came to Harvard. “College helped me find a community where I started to realize that feminism was about creating communities and trying to come together to develop tangible ways of supporting women...
Most dangerous of all, this attitude turns those who hold biased views into victims of a politically correct culture in which they can’t express themselves, and so never get a chance to learn from a thoughtful response. All of a sudden, television networks are reminiscing about the good old days instead of focusing on real issues like the achievement gap between white and black youth, and who’s better off? Nobody has really changed their mind. All Stephanie Grace learned was that if you venture an opinion in an e-mail to a friend...