Word: opinionizing
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...Israel panics now, and lets public opinion shift to the right, Benjamin Netanyahu will rise to power. The only real hawk in the election, Netanyahu promises to be harsh on terrorism—he will behave like a bull in a china shop. Wandering between the shelves with good intentions and no real desire to cause harm, he will shatter the little china figures into pieces and lead us to disaster. Israel will pay the price for panicking; as during Netanyahu’s previous term in office, buses will be blowing up in the center of Tel Aviv. Four...
...didn’t really know what to expect, but I had a great weekend and it sealed the deal for me. It’s just where I wanted to be.”Notably, though, Salsgiver has no illusions about his tenure in crimson thus far.In his opinion, the supposed big fish in a small pond has simply struggled.“My college seasons here at Harvard, to be honest, have been pretty mediocre in terms of what I wanted to accomplish,” he says. “For some reason, I haven?...
...only formally entering the fray last fall when it joined a friend-of-the-court brief supporting FAIR’s case. But faculty members took a more active role, and last fall, 40 Harvard law professors filed their own brief in the case. In yesterday’s opinion, the court singled out the professors’ argument and struck it down.In a statement last night, a spokesman for University President Lawrence H. Summers said that the University still remains opposed to the amendment.“Harvard fully respects the Supreme Court’s decision...
Dealing a setback to his alma mater, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. ’76 rejected an argument put forth by 40 Harvard Law professors when he delivered the Supreme Court’s opinion in a major military recruitment case yesterday.In the first paragraph of his holding, Roberts singled out the Harvard professors’ brief and later wrote that the Harvard faculty members’ interpretation of the Solomon Amendment is “clearly not what Congress had in mind.”The Harvard professors had asked the court to avoid a constitutional showdown...
...knew very little about the possible outflow of scientists. Even before the USTAR bill was passed last week, HMS Professor of Neurobiology David Corey said he was skeptical. “The whole thing seems to be pretty conditional,” Corey said. “In my opinion, there may be a group of neuroscience researchers that are considering leaving, and perhaps another fifty that the University is thinking about hiring. It seems unlikely that there would be sixty researchers leaving.” Other administrators at the University of Utah said they were unsure...