Word: freedoms
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...therefore, would be a fascinating and relevant perspective for both the University and geopolitical communities to understand, and the Kennedy School should be lauded for trying to bring Pak to speak. The State Department must recognize the value of open debate on important issues and should allow Pak the freedom to travel in order to present an opposing viewpoint...
...guide to Arabs and outsiders alike. "Towards the Rise of Women in the Arab World" is the long-awaited fourth and final installment of the Arab Human Development Report compiled under the auspices of the United Nations Development Fund. The AHDRs, including earlier reports dealing with youth, education and freedom, are the work of scores of Arab intellectuals, scholars, writers, diplomats and development specialists who command wide respect in the region and internationally...
...because some think that Islam is all about male power," says Fadillioglu, who aligns herself with the liberal side of the faith. "There is nothing about covering in the book," she explains, when quizzed about why many Muslim women here do not cover up and are passionate in their freedom not to do so, while other women, including the Prime Minister's wife, are equally insistent on wearing a head scarf...
European leaders expecting a humbled Bush at the NATO summit in Latvia instead got a stout speech in which he rearticulated his foreign policy. "We must advance freedom," he said, "as the great alternative to tyranny and terror." When kids in Indonesia asked his hobby, he replied, "Baseball--sports" and told them to go easy on TV. He got his most enthusiastic reception in Vietnam, as curious onlookers lined the roads and waved at his passing motorcade. There was much the country and the visiting dignitary had in common. Neither has much appetite for looking back at the difficulties...
...work put on by the Harvard Radcliffe Dance Company and choreographed by Brenda Divelbliss of the Dance Program in collaboration with the dancers. The piece lived up to its name; throughout the performance, dancers drifted on and off stage in a seemingly random fashion. Although drifting seems to imply freedom, the choreography felt limited as many dancers repeated similar motions throughout. The dance that followed, “Fanaa,” once again displayed strong cultural influences. Both the choreographer T. Riya Sen ’07 and the dancers were members of the South Asian Dance Company...