Word: resentence
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...agreement hinged on the removal of the pricing provision from the Senate bill. Said Pressler: "At no time during our conversation did I indicate that any specific action by Time Warner would result in deletion of the program-access provisions...[That] would be wrong, if not illegal. I resent the inference in your letter." Time Warner lobbyists claim the letter was merely a badly worded account of an innocent Pressler-brokered agreement. Nevertheless, the provision was excised--indeed, the same day as Pressler's speech--as part of amendments by majority leader Bob Dole...
...border. Chinese authorities waited until July 8 to announce his arrest on charges that will include disclosing "state secrets" to "foreign organizations," a crime that could carry the death penalty. Howell, who was returned to Kazakhstan after being detained with Wu for a few days, says he didn't resent the guards. "Harry kept saying, 'They're just doing their job. They're not bad people. They're caught up in the system too.'" Last week Wu was finally allowed a visit by an American consular official, to whom Wu reported that he had not been tortured...
...invited us to tag along to use as leverage to get Letterman to take him." The Marines refused to entertain the offer. It's gone that way all along between the two services as O'Grady's glory has been parceled out. The Marines admire the pilot himself but resent the Air Force's refusal to let them fly O'Grady from the Kearsarge to his home base in Aviano, Italy. Instead the Air Force insisted they bring O'Grady ashore, where an Air Force jet picked...
...resolution also betrays a fundamental contempts for student self-determination and a willful dismissal of student opinion. But the students know the stakes. Over 1000 of them have signed a petition protesting total randomization; over 200 have rallied in front of University Hall to demonstrate their outrage. The students resent the fact that the decision was announced at the beginning of finals period, in the (vain) hope of avoiding protest. When two separate polls indicate that more than 80 percent of students oppose randomization, the administration's actions can only be called cynical and cowardly...
...genuinely intelligent character. At least, a character who didn't have some serious personality flaw to go along with the brainpower. No, that would threaten the average American. All those smart characters must have something wrong with them. They make the perfect kind of despicable foil--superior enough to resent, yet inferior enough to dismiss. The anti-intellectual American can rest easy...