Word: refering
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...accusers tell us that the anti-religious liberals' influence is considerable and widespread. Perhaps they worry over the liberals' anti-religious effect on members of the executive branch, such as our President, an active churchgoer who also consults pop spiritualists like Marianne Williamson and Anthony Robbins. Maybe the accusers refer to liberals' effect on the First Lady, who is known for extolling the many virtues of prayer. Or do they refer to the liberals' influence over the nation's courts, where obsessive secularism truly reigns...
...understand Johnson's appeal to the language of "egalitarianism" and the importance of equality of opportunity. But we must remember that there are plenty of single-sex organizations at Harvard which do not exist because of some latent sense of gender superiority. I refer to organizations such as the Din and Tonics or the Radcliffe Pitches which have all male or female membership. In both cases there are artistic values associated with all-male or all-female voices and skits and the reason why we hear no outcry is because these opportunities are balanced for men and women...
...acknowledge Johnson's concern, but urge him to be more fastidious in his research before making such strong assertions. We invite him to speak with us so that he may discover why we refer to ourselves as a company. We are a unified theatrical organization of which every member is an equal and willing part. RACHEL N. BELLO '98, BRITTAIN D. BRIGHT '00 SARAH A. CANNIZZO '98, CAROLYN A. CASSIDY '99 JENNIE E. CONNERY '99, TERESA L. CROCKETT '00 ELENA C. DECOSTE '99, MARAH J. HARDT '00 SARAH A. KNIGHT '00, COLLEEN A. MCGUINNESS '99 MARISA L. PORGES '00, JESSICA...
Since religion or connection with Christian organizations is in no way part of the King-Driskell platform, the intimation made in today's editorial must refer not to platform but to private faith. To imply that having religious beliefs as a candidate should "raise concern" among students is to characterize private faith as dangerous and unwanted. To call "values-driven leadership"--something one would hope all candidates would strive to embody--"troubling" due to private faith, which has been completely unmentioned by the candidates themselves, is to stigmatize those who hold to religious beliefs and to prejudge and misrepresent their...
Another possibility lies in the nature of the fat. Nutritionists refer to both simple carbohydrates and complex carbohydrates, so it seems logical that there could be both simple fats and complex fats, and the latter would take the form a + bi, where i is the square root of negative one. Clearly, the imaginary component would throw off the calculations, although the body could digest it merely by reading the diet book Think Yourself Thin...