Word: regards
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...defense is nothing new. Harvard coach Frank Sullivan's top priority for any game has always been to hold the opponent under 40 percent from the field. The Crimson did well in that regard, keeping the Bears at 38.5 percent for the game. That has been the rule in Harvard's recent winning streak, as neither Lehigh, Cornell, Columbia or Dartmouth ever got hot offensively...
...very telling of the objectivist cult-following that it should regard the poor and the unsuccessful (who are the brunt of their joke) as failures. In objectivists' eyes, the poor fail willingly because all people have and have enjoyed equal opportunity, have entered this world with equal freedoms to flex equal minds. They believe that every wealthy and successful individual is so because of his or her "productivity," that the uncreative and less intelligent and less talented should suffer for their fruitlessness, and ultimately, that our civil society should feel no obligation to them...
Obviously, there are more questions than answers here with regard to the notion of sacrificial success. But these are issues with which each of us must deal, being as we are the emerging core of the professional world. Whether one opts to go into business, law or medicine, the occupational sacrifice in terms of time and energy necessary to pursue careers in them is tremendous. Each of these professions is worthwhile in and of itself, from my perspective in addition to being externally rewarding. Yet they are also demanding in the extreme, from the initial application process for graduate school...
...regard to L'Affaire Newt, I would say, "Mr. Speaker, people who work in crass Houses shouldn't throw stones." CHARLES J. HUEBNER Harbor Springs, Michigan...
...that regard he is the opposite of, say, Bill Clinton, who brackets the other end of the baby boom: Gates analytically rigorous and emotionally reserved, the President equally smart but intellectually undisciplined and readily intimate. They played golf on Martha's Vineyard once, and the President, as usual, worked hard at bonding emotionally and being personally charming and intimate. He expressed sorrow about the death of Gates' mother, shared the pain of the recent death of his own mother and gave golfing tips to Melinda. But Gates noticed that Clinton never bore in or showed rigorous curiosity about technological issues...