Word: guilts
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Still, when I received the information in my mailbox detailing the extraordinary number of programs that my contribution would support--and that most of my contribution would go to providing financial aid for students for years to come--I felt a pang of guilt for refusing to help out. Then, about a week ago, when each of us received a "personalized" letter from Dean of the Faculty Jeremy R. Knowles that emphasized the importance of current and lifelong giving, I almost felt that I was betraying my own grandfather by saying...
...taken the job as camp commander solely out of a humanitarian desire to increase food supplies and release Serb prisoners. "Mucic was trying to help the people . . . he was not really in charge," argued Tapuskovic. "Conditions in the camp were not meant to make people suffer." Instead, Tapuskovic maintains, guilt for the Celebici atrocities lies squarely on the heads of the three Muslim d efendants: Zejnil Delalic, a Muslim military commander thought to have established the camp, Hazim Delic, the camp's deputy commander charged with four murders, and camp guard Esad Landzo, who is accused of five slayings...
Jones, who has hinted at a strategy of casting suspicion on plotters still at large, told TIME that the alleged confession was "a deliberate attempt to protect other conspirators in the case." In 1995 news stories appeared in which McVeigh admits his guilt to unnamed sources. (McVeigh told TIME in March 1996 that "I've said I'm not guilty.") Still, even if the Dallas notes are authentic, they are covered by attorney-client privilege, and will probably never be entered as evidence. (The privilege protects confidential communications made by a client to a lawyer.) As for Jones, even...
...rooted for Simpson's acquittal in the criminal trial openly expressed doubts about his innocence. Nevertheless they applauded the first decision with some misgivings. Why then are these people bemoaning the second verdict? The answer is that for blacks and whites alike, the issue was never Simpson's guilt or liability; it was his color. EDWARD ELLIS JR. Ionia, Michigan...
...sure to raise eyebrows among Jewish leaders wondering just what their share is meant to be. But TIME's Bruce Crumley says it was a compromise Koller had to make. "There's obviously a lot of political pressure that such a fund is seen not as an admission of guilt," he said. "After denying the missing funds all along, the banks have just recently called this an oversight. They don't want to go any further." The proposed fund would be in addition to a humanitarian fund already set up by local Swiss banks and to ongoing private fund-raising...