Word: fooled
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...representative at the office. “Her first responsibility was to the Radcliffe Institute, and she carried out that responsibility with a strong hand,” Warren says. “Drew’s a very strong person. That she’s polite should not fool anyone.”While Faust won’t move into Mass. Hall’s corner office until July 1, those who have watched her at Radcliffe say that some of the leadership traits that earned her the moniker “Chainsaw Drew” will likely...
...icons but delivered by neither: peace, prosperity and a better future for the next generation. Anyone who thinks that the President's most important job is giving inspirational speeches - the main talent shown by both of these icons and by both of Kristol's presumptive successors - is a damned fool. David P. Vernon, TUCSON, ARIZONA, U.S. Tense Times at the Border The article on Talibanistan highlighted the grim realities faced by the people in the borderlands of Pakistan and Afghanistan [April 2]. Every possible effort should be made to pacify negative elements there. This requires coordinated efforts by locals...
...bold enough to explain to her fans the dichotomy between the old and new Avril. Perhaps she should heed her own lyrics from her 2004 hit “Complicated”: “Take off all your preppy clothes / You know you’re not fooling anyone / When you’ve become somebody else round everyone else.” Speaking of fooling people, a simple glance at the album’s lyrics may fool Lavigne’s fans into thinking the track “Hot” was written by Fergie...
...album’s main theme: Oberst’s personal longing for love in a world of uncertainty and pain. In the song “Make a Plan to Love Me,” he sings, “Life is too short / To be a fool / I don’t owe you that / Do what you feel / Whatever is cool / But I just have to ask / Will you make a plan to love me?” These moments reveal him for what in part, he is: a young, emotional musician who just needs a little...
...Sadly, Kaye's indictment is well founded. But he's also right in his choice of words. People like Cho are indeed only seemingly powerful. In an open culture with cheap and plentiful guns, any fool can kill a lot of people. For all the loss and suffering such a shooting sparks, it is in fact a weak and furtive act, one that masquerades as a gesture of sublime power but is really an act of confusion and cowardice. The very purpose of the murders, Welner explains, is to give the shooter the last word. Unfortunately, what he says when...