Word: intellections
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...Clearly, Gore won the debate," said Raj Prabhakar, a student at Harvard Business School. "Bush didn't have the intellect to compete...
Sustained by media generated sound bytes and oversimplifications, the American intellect is starved of any real knowledge of the Indian subcontinent. Pigeonholed into a single-issue agenda, Americans are left with a portrait of the country that is both inaccurate and ill-informed. To most Americans, India is a nation embroiled in a nuclear arms race with Pakistan and an ethnic battle over the state of Kashmir. The victim of news analyses too watered down and politicized to be of any real informational use, the depth and complexity of the country's social, political and economic condition are lost...
...composer. He can be emotional (as on Airport Sadness), but he is never weepy. He can be jaunty (West Hartford), but he never descends into trifling silliness. And while his work tends to be courageously complex (the dizzyingly cerebral Amsterdam), he never gets lost in the labyrinth of his intellect. "Memory can make a location more 'real' than it ever was in reality," he notes. This album takes us to places we could never visit, except while riding on the shoulders of Mehldau's gigantic talent...
Beyond exceptional military service, Boudreau said in a press release yesterday that the members of the battalion were distinguished by their intellect...
Every one of the group knows what has just transpired. The students have already begun to understand that modern medicine is action, that its excitement comes from the challenge to intellect, to technological skills, even to personal daring. The greatest victories go to those who diagnose brilliantly, who are undaunted by the most intimidating confrontations with disease, so long as there is a possibility of cure or at least improvement. These are the biomedical gladiators, and their arena is the hospital. Unlike the gladiators of ancient Rome, they always win. Well, almost always--and only for a while...