Word: hope
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...Even though all Americans want this industry to succeed, I cannot support a plan to spend taxpayer money to bail them out" is the way Spencer Bachus, the ranking Republican on the Committee on Financial Services, got the House hearings going. The incoming Administration is not holding out much hope that Congress can find a solution in the coming weeks. Instead, it is looking at what options - and pots of money - will be available once Barack Obama takes office...
...buck than GM's? The answer is with the United Auto Workers, who receive far higher pay and benefits than non-union workers in comparable jobs. As long as the labor bosses' power remains, Detroit's Big Three are doomed. President Truman stood up to the railroad unions. I hope Barack Obama will stand up to the auto unions. John Bucur, Wellington, Florida...
...stuck behind you, or if you’re trying to show me how brilliant your small sibling is because it can recognize its fingers, or if you’re in the carrel in front of me breathing like you just ran a 5k, you better hope I’m listening to Disney. So that instead of shoving you or mocking you or glaring at you aggressively, we can settle this the normal, civilized way.A battle-dance. Hanson style. —Jessica L. Fleischer ’10 is a History and Literature concentrator in Eliot House...
...said the psychology professor. “The cost of semantics in this case happens to be $3.5 million per destructive event, according to the insurance policy.” Alec J. Kunkel ’12, a self-professed fan of Pinker, attended the seminar with the hope of getting his copy of the professor’s book autographed. “He has an ability to take immensely complex ideas and break them into grasp-able concepts that are comprehensible to everyone,” he said. “He has an unyielding willingness...
...likely that the jumble of frustrations and anxieties being aired by India's citizens may lessen as Mumbai picks itself up after "26/11." But with the affluent classes riled and focused on the country's problems, maverick politicians like Deora and others in civil society hope for a reinvigoration of Indian politics. "If the informed and educated don't lend a voice of unity and strength now," says Deora, "who will?" Farzeen Barucha, a 21-year-old Mumbaikar, agrees. "Some people may think there's not much value in me standing here," he says. "But this is the start...