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Word: pardoners (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...press that “there is no noble alterative to [Summers’] resignation.” In case you hadn’t gotten the message, Matory added a TV-ready soundbite: “Larry Summers should resign as president of Harvard University.” Pardon me for asking, but: resign for what, exactly...

Author: By Brian M. Goldsmith, | Title: Something About Larry | 3/17/2005 | See Source »

...contemplate - and not difficult to imagine - just how high up in the Pakistani government and military establishment Khan's allies are. Khan was too hot to handle, so even making him the fall guy for selling Pakistan's nuclear secrets was out of the question. Instead, President Pervez Musharraf pardoned Khan and put him under house arrest in his sumptuous villa. This for an act of treason so blatant and outrageous that it has few parallels in any nation, authoritarian or not. Khan's pardon was part of a cover-up. Rama Prem Freiburg, Germany Khan has confessed to leaking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 3/6/2005 | See Source »

...your pardon, Mr. Konrad, but the reality is pretty freaking awesome...

Author: By Alex Mcphillips, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: 'Bama Slamma: FleetCenter Inspires Creative Greatness | 3/2/2005 | See Source »

...wager placed on a tennis match. Badly wounded, facing a murder charge and a sentence of death, he fled Rome, the scene of his early triumphs as a painter. After a four-year struggle to return, he died, possibly of typhus, on a Tuscan beach. Although the papal pardon he sought for years was finally granted, he did not live to learn the news. All through that complicated exile, while circling among Naples, Malta and Sicily, Caravaggio managed to sustain and even deepen his intuitions about light, shadow and pictorial drama. The evidence is in every room of "Caravaggio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Dark Master | 2/27/2005 | See Source »

...denying that Harvard’s past is not peppered with highly contentious actions on the part of its students and faculty. And no one is looking for a pardon. Yet, while Norwood’s examples are certainly disgraceful, they are not uncommon to the interwar period, when many American institutions struggled with their relationships with pre-war Germany. The fact that Norwood has chosen to harp on Harvard alone makes his paper smack of opportunism, not the qualities of an honest scholarly attempt to provide accurate historical perspective...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Singling Out Harvard | 11/18/2004 | See Source »

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