Word: proved
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...have not. Well, it's kind of odd. You kind of know you're imagining things but at the same time you kind of don't. I was walking through a park, high on acid, and there were these killer ducks after me. I can't prove it, but it sure felt like I was being followed by them. It was terrifying. It was one of the more bizarre and unhinged moments in my life. I got away though. They didn...
Thomas Carlyle famously called economics “the dismal science.” Anthony P. Dedousis ’11, an economics concentrator in Leverett House, is out to prove him wrong. His column, “Full Faith and Credit,” will investigate the interaction between economics and American politics on alternate Thursdays...
Friday’s game against Boston College will also give the Crimson a chance to prove itself among the college soccer elite. The Eagles have steadily climbed up the rankings to No. 4 in the country with recent wins over Marist and Long Beach State, to whom Harvard lost last Friday...
These games are also the last before the Crimson makes its Ivy debut against Penn on September 26. If Harvard wants to repeat as league champion, this would be the opportune time to prove itself...
...interest because it has a measure of political correctness that technical terms lack, according to Dr. Rande Matteson, an ex-officer and professor of criminal justice at Florida's Saint Leo University. Matteson says the term is "less damaging" than dubbing someone a suspect, particularly if the police prove to be wrong in their identification. Cynthia Hujar Orr, president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, says authorities may also use the term as a way to curry cooperation, on the assumption that an individual may be more willing to work with police...