Word: oughtness
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...principle of such a rule is that the real life concerns of living people ought not to be affected by publicity," says Michael W. Roberts, secretary to the Harvard Corporation...
...good enough for the government withnuclear secrets, then it ought to be good enoughfor Harvard with educational secrets," Hersbergsays...
...Gramm's biggest advantages is his ability to raise money. On Feb. 23, the day before he announced his candidacy, he played host in Dallas to the most successful fund-raising event ever held for any federal candidate, gathering $4.1 million in contributions. Says Gramm: "That ought to make it very, very difficult to breathe in these other campaigns." He will undoubtedly have bucketfuls of such money by the time the 1996 primaries roll around. He just needs to be very careful how he gets it and how he spends...
Carlos Salinas ought to have been pleased to learn of the breakthrough in capturing the alleged ``intellectual author'' of the assassination. Until, that is, the ex-President learned that agents were converging on the house of the murdered man's former wife, Carlos Salinas' sister Adriana, to arrest the suspect: the ex-President's older brother, Raul...
...Perhaps, but then, we have always believed that "sophmoric" is the kind of accusation that, if made at all, should at least be spelled correctly. The word, by the way, means "intellectually pretentious and conceited but immature and ill-informed;" it's a term with which Ms. Rose really ought to be quite familiar. Her inchoate, snitty, schoolmarmish, resentful, achingly stupid article is an embarrassment even by Crimson standards, which is saying a lot. Adam Feldman '95 Hasty Pudding Theatricals