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COMMON FEELINGS--that is an important one. We Arabs tend to be overly sensitive and very reactionary. And sometimes, we analyze cases using our hearts and not our minds. (I noticed these features in your article.) What joins us together, Bader, is our determination to reestablish and heal the Arab pride which was, and which continues to be, humiliated since the Ottoman Empire. We, the Arabs, are very proud of our history and our heritage, and that is why we all live on the hope of uniting together one day--to restore our pride and our lost throne. That...

Author: By Hazem Ben-gacem, | Title: Pan-Arabism Is Not Dead | 2/28/1991 | See Source »

...have done everything to improve [credibility]," says Frank M. Cross, Hancock professor of Hebrew. "It takes time to heal...

Author: By Lan N. Nguyen, | Title: Middle Eastern Studies: Entering the Limelight | 1/31/1991 | See Source »

...doorways between here and there. Some people were uprooted after the War on Poverty was fought to a draw, when their rents went up, their wages went down, and the safety net turned out to be full of holes. Others were in transit from mental asylums that didn't heal them or to halfway houses that didn't exist. Still others were maimed by drug abuse. Communities from coast to coast quietly wished that the living clutter would all go away. Yet during the past 10 years it has only multiplied...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Answers At Last | 12/17/1990 | See Source »

...tyrant's image and a 50% rise in oil prices since the Persian Gulf crisis broke out sealed his doom. Said one movement leader: "From government officers to ricksha pullers, all were out in the street. It was phenomenal." It will also be phenomenal if democracy manages to heal a country that was born in a brutal secession from Pakistan in 1971 and has stumbled from coup to coup since...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bangladesh The Dictator Is Gone! | 12/17/1990 | See Source »

...rely on them to put down the rebellion is a sign of serious political weakness. The Herrera episode was also a setback for U.S. interests in Panama, if only because the American show of force was bound to irritate wounds from last year's invasion that have yet to heal. The U.S. still has 10,000 troops stationed in Panama, but that is a substantial reduction from the 24,000 present right after the invasion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Panama Once More To the Rescue | 12/17/1990 | See Source »

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