Word: guilt
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...second round, which the U.S. won 116-34, the panel debated whether defendants who do not take the stand in their own defense are implicitly admitting guilt...
Because innocent defendants want to clear their names, silence in court implies guilt, said Judge Brian Capstick, who represented the British view...
...feeling of guilt can make "poetry phobia" explode into sheer terror of the genre. As Professor of English James Engell puts it, "If you're not accustomed to [the technical features of poetry], then it makes you a little scared of it. But then...the guilt factor kicks in. You feel [that] if you're in college, you ought to be able to scan a poem." As a result, "sometimes there is a hesitancy" on the part of students to approach poetry...
...like Alan. It's also (perhaps intentionally) hard to commiserate with Dr. Dysart, who comes off as more of a middle-aged yuppie whiner than a genuine care-giver. Nevertheless, the doctor does succeed in exposing the complexities of what seemed to be an open-and-shut case of guilt. While most viewers probably still end up condemning the boy for his crime, the rush to judgment is not nearly as hasty or eager as at the beginning of the play...
...committee to decide whether to establish on online journalism category for next year?s awards. One member of that committee is Rena Pederson, vice president/editorial page editor of The Dallas Morning News, which recently made headlines by breaking its exclusive story concerning Timothy McVeigh?s reported admission of guilt to his attorneys on its website before the story was published in its print edition. Gentlemen, start your computers...