Word: reassessed
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GOODMAN'S ATTACK offers a vivid example of the extremism fostered by the Israelis uncompromising attitude--what Defense Minister Ariel Sharon calls the "will to live." It should therefore make Israelis take stock and reassess their country's intransigence. By basing their nation's survival upon military force and repression, Israelis are skirting future disaster--and risking the betrayal of the Zionist principles of social justice upon which their nation was founded. In other words, "the evil will to live" may ultimately bring about willful self-destruction. Israel's true security--its liberation--can only be maintained if the country...
...round-robin system will force coaches to reassess their teams, especially the fledgling one such as ice hockey--to which the commitment and intensity of the Ivy schools ranges from "quasi-club" to varsity. Coaches will have to ask themselves if their team is of a high-enough caliber to survive continuous Ivy League competition. Before, Parry said, "it was all too easy to jump into a championship meet." The round-robin system, he added, "will lead to consistency in all our programs...
...gained nationwide attention. In the subsequent months eyewitnesses have reversed their testimony, jurors have voted one way and later denounced their decision and a judge has pronounced a sentence which seemed unusually light But above all, the case has shaken the medical community's foundations, causing it to reassess its ethical guidelines and its methods of enforcing ethical codes...
State officials will tell the city Friday "go or no go, just like the astronauts" with plans to reassess city property at 100 per cent of market value beginning this year, city manager Robert Healy told the Cambridge City Council last night...
...Washington, the State Department immediately said that it "deplored" the arrests, and asked the Sandinista government to "reassess the contributions these leaders have made and release them immediately." The four Nicaraguan businessmen, said a U.S. spokesmen, were part of "a longstanding tradition of opposing oppression in their country." The arrest of the COSEP leaders may raise questions about a measure, passed by the Senate but not by the House, to send $33.3 million in aid to Nicaragua...