Word: pinning
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...White House, and will stay out of kindergarten-teacher mode when he's answering the questions of ordinary citizens in St. Louis. Bush, having cemented his position as at least a viable candidate, will have to keep up his momentum on foreign policy, and find some statesmanlike way to pin the current turmoil on the last seven and a half years. And then it's precisely three weeks until Election...
...partisans of a student center pin the blame for various defects in life at Harvard on the lack of a building dedicated to the needs of students. If we had a student center, they remind us, student life would be less atomized, there would be a greater sense of community and Harvard's rather hit-and-miss social scene would be invigorated. Though undergraduate life does suffer from these problems, focusing our energies on lobbying for a student center is futile and counterproductive. The obstacles are obvious and formidable--the lack of any suitable land in notoriously crowded Cambridge, indifference...
...People like to pin certain extremist ideas on Muslims," added Rita Hamad '03, vice president of HSAS...
...estimated 370 million Internet users worldwide, of which 160 million are in the United States and Canada. Yet ICANN's ill-publicized membership drive from February 25 to July 31 garnered a meager 158,000 applications. Due in substantial part to ICANN's delays in mailing out passwords and PIN numbers, only 76,000 individuals worldwide, of whom 10,000 were from North America, were able to activate their memberships in time to gain voting rights. Thus, the body setting the standards for the world's Internet usage will have been elected by 0.02 percent of eligible individuals...
About 37 percent of the electorate--consider themselves independents. Of them, those likely to vote are hard to pin down. They swing...