Word: feel
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...still have a lot of room for progress. I feel sorry for what happened," he said...
...Perhaps I feel strongly about this issue because I am heavily involved in an organization whose entire focus seems to be addressing internal and external complaints. The Undergraduate Council has often degenerated into bitching sessions in which members complain about the structure of the council, its lack of legitimacy and the partisanship of its leaders. While I too have engaged in such sessions, often with relish, I must admit that it is time for a change. Truly constructive criticism spurs progress. So, to all those people out there who want to complain about love on this campus, you can take...
...drive back to campus in the fall of sophomore year doesn't exactly feel new, but it is significantly different from your arrival the previous year. It's exciting. You're living in a house, and if everything finished smoothly the year before you've got some blockmates, concentration (that you'll probably change) and most important, a feeling of having returned somewhere where people know you. After sophomores settle down, they begin to feel that they know what's going on. They are no longer confined to the Yard or the Grille for their social lives...
...ascending scale of knowledge, juniors are in some sense the most complex case. The reason is that they do in fact know quite a bit about college in general and Harvard in particular, but still not half as much as they think do. Essentially, juniors feel from the beginning of the year that they know what they're talking about, and that the coming year will just be a matter of getting what they want out of their remaining time here. Where they are correct is that junior year is in some ways the make or break year, the year...
...concerned about getting burned in Congress over anything Chinese and wants to look tough. U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky showed up on Capitol Hill on Tuesday to sell the American hard line. But she and the administration could now risk getting burned from another direction: Many U.S. businessmen feel the White House may have let a good deal slip...