Word: joining
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...these days, Dodik sounds like a changed man. In the past two months he has questioned the underlying agreement that ended the war, attacked Muslim politicians for "consorting" with war criminals and asserted that his Serb-dominated Republic may try to secede from Bosnia and Herzegovina and ultimately join Serbia. Meanwhile, Bosnian Muslim leaders in Sarajevo are matching him word for word: Haris Silajdzic, a former Bosnian Muslim Prime Minister, and another erstwhile moderate, told Time that the boundaries imposed at the end of the war should be erased because "they are not natural. They are based on genocide." Between...
...moods fluctuated between anger and joy, frustration and triumph. But a feeling of melancholy prevailed as I came face to face with the larger tragedy beyond my own: stolen youth. Specialist Hilario Bermanis, 21, had been built like a fullback when he left his home in Micronesia to join the Army. Now he was hunched in a wheelchair, a thick neck and broad shoulders the only reminder of his once muscular body. He had lost his left hand and both legs above the knee to a rocket-propelled grenade in Baghdad...
Chase Manhattan Bank offered students free rides around campus in ten pedicabs bearing “Chase +1” logos urging them to join the bank’s Facebook group, according to Chase +1 Marketing Manager Paolo Spidaliere...
...context, perfection is unattainable. Instead, we must hope that Dean Fitzsimmons and his staff will continue their laudable work to assemble new classes of leaders, innovators, team players, and the overwhelming talent to which Harvard has become accustomed. Let’s remember, every Harvard student was asked to join that remarkable community for a reason. I trust the College is better served for each of them. JOSEPH D. McGEEHIN ’06 September...
...With two separate pools and two separate acceptance rates—21 percent early and nine percent regular—there was a much higher chance of succeeding in Harvard’s early action pool. High school counselors who knew this would advise their students to join the “easier” pool while other students had no idea what they were missing. With a unified acceptance plan, all students will be judged against each other in one round which will by its very nature create a fairer, more just set of decisions.But if the admissions process...