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...Western alliance. "We could have the son of Javier Solana as Prime Minister and they still would not let us in the E.U. for 10 years! Half of us will be dead by then!" he told supporters this month in the northern border town of Subotica. "We don't owe anything to anyone!" Kostunica's message is not quite as militant, but it's in the same vein. He complains bitterly about the "anti-Serb" Hague Tribunal and, in an interview with Time, suggested he had no intention of sending four indictees now in Serbia for trial there. "The Hague...
That employees can participate freely in House and other University events is extremely important for generating positive attitudes within the University community. Harvard workplaces ought to be characterized by respect for employees. As Harvard’s August 2002 Statement of Values affirms, “we owe it to one another to uphold certain basic values of the community [including] respect for the rights, differences, and dignity of others.” Those values must be adhered to in interactions between workers and supervisors, and claims by an employee that a supervisor or manager was disrespectful should be taken...
...united nation, he also bequeathed India its most serious political problem, the insurgency in Kashmir. Although Tharoor's biography lacks the exhaustiveness and depth of some of its predecessors, its attitude is perfect for the times. Writes Tharoor, "What we are today, both for good and for ill, we owe in great measure...
...citizenship is never easy; among those already fully-enfranchised, there are always some petty and closed minds who will do all they can to stop their fellow men and women from enjoying all the privileges of citizenship. With the SJC’s go-ahead, Massachusetts’ egalitarians owe it to themselves to be even more tenacious in opening the institution of marriage...
...surfeit of dangerous drinking, Harvard’s social culture shares with universities nationwide. The unique bipolarity of our campus’s social scene, however, takes root in the very traits that Harvard’s selective admissions process encourages. Many students who survive Byerly Hall owe their success to their unrelenting superegos, flogging them onward towards ever more precocious achievement. Torn between an exceptionality they love and a normalcy few others will acknowledge, Harvard students find themselves attracted to a manic social scene that is stodgy by week and unmoored by weekend. Dr. Perfection and Mr. Lush...