Word: judgments
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Last night, the Undergraduate Council passed a fine resolution urging the University to expand its non-discrimination clause to include transgendered individuals. Without passing judgment on the ethics of individuals who identify themselves as a sex different from that which they were born, and without providing an intellectual discourse on the social construction of gender (to whatever degree that exists), we feel that it is proper for Harvard to recognize the equal rights of the transgendered within the context of University policy...
...White House released 148 pages of memos, E-mails, routing slips and other bureaucratic flotsam that painted the clearest picture yet of the courtship between donors and policymakers. For months the White House has denied that the money gushing in from wealthy Asian interests clouded anyone's foreign-policy judgment. Yet the records show that the interests of American foreign policy were sometimes on loan to the President's political fortunes--and fortune hunters...
...continued public confidence in this investigation, it would be inappropriate to set any arbitrary date upon which to terminate my role as independent counsel," Starr said, reading from a prepared statement. "I made a mistake," he told reporters afterward. "Setting an arbitrary date was unwise and incorrect. . .an unwise judgment on my part." Starr's announcement Monday that he would be stepping down Aug. 1 to become dean of two graduate schools at Pepperdine University had drawn a chorus of boos from Republicans and happy hoots from the White House, while also prompting rampant speculation that Starr's investigation, which...
...until now, Crimson coverage of the Democrats has been fair and accurate, and I commend the editors and reporters for exercising good judgment in the past. If anything has been snuffed out of existence, it is this good judgment. I hope that it will reappear in the near future. --Eric S. Olney '98, president, Harvard-Radcliffe College Democrats
...that he killed Ronald Goldman. Steering clear of directly naming Simpson as the culprit, Goldman said, "The suggestion is that if the person . . . that murdered my son wants to write out a complete confession and publish it in newspapers around the country, we'll be glad to ignore the judgment." Even if Simpson is guilty, Goldman does not really expect him to accept the challenge: "That will never happen. This person hasn't owned responsibility for any of his actions through his lifetime." Although the audacious offer could save Simpson a lot of dough and finally bring Goldman the satisfaction...