Word: fairness
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...here live at Lavietes for the second straight night bringing you exciting Ivy League action! We've got the Lions from Columbia vs. our fair Crimson as Amaker's boys try to recover from last night's devastating collapse...
...Musharraf such a problem? Musharraf is a bad loser. Vis-a-vis the people of Pakistan, he is a bad loser. He arrested the judiciary under the fear that the justices would decide against him. [Until then] it was a fair fight. He was represented by the top lawyers in the country. The judiciary had earlier decided against him [and his bid to run for office while remaining Army Chief] unanimously. We were expecting a second judgment, which might only have said he had to remove his uniform. It probably would have bound him to be re-elected...
...glad they are in Winthrop.Timothy J. Smith ’08RR: Have you ever had a hot TF?TJS: Yes. I had Michael Nitsch as my Justice TF last semester. Government classes are generally pretty titillating and thus attract some of the finest. I think it’s fair to say that most people find Michael Nitsch above average. He was probably the most attractive Justice TF. Sandel is an attractive man too. It’s a toss up. Ryan S. Nolan ’09RR: Have you ever...
...Musharraf cannot afford to hold free and fair elections," says Nawaz Sharif, the former Prime Minister who was ousted by the then General Musharraf in a 1999 coup. "His own skin is at risk. He needs indemnity for his actions on November 3, which he cannot achieve if the opposition is in the majority." Sharif, who heads one of Pakistan's major parties, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, has been banned from running for a parliamentary seat by Musharraf's government. Musharraf's only option, says Sharif, is "rigging. The other option would be for him to leave quietly before...
...Musharraf has repeatedly assured Pakistanis that the elections will not be rigged, calling Monday's polls "the mother of all elections" and telling state TV, "Despite all the insinuation and apprehensions, the elections will be free, fair, transparent and peaceful." Independent election monitors disagree. Human Rights Watch claims to have obtained a recording made by a journalist interviewing Pakistan's Attorney General Malik Qayyum by phone. In the course of the interview, Qayyum takes a call on a second line, and urges the unidentified caller to leave Sharif's party in favor of a ticket with another, unnamed party...