Word: schultze
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...love travel and have a fetish for lists, then rejoice: Patricia Schultz's new book, 1,000 Places to See Before You Die, should keep you happily occupied for the rest of your natural term. It's a work as provocative as it is encyclopedic?after all, how do you decide which destinations make the cut? Not everyone is going to agree with Schultz's choices, and the author is aware of the quagmire she's got herself into. "Why give the Pork Pit in Montego Bay the same weight as Paris' legendary Taillevent?" she asks, referring to two well...
...love travel and have a fetish for lists, then rejoice: Patricia Schultz's new book, 1,000 Places to See Before You Die (Workman Publishing; 800 pages), should keep you happily occupied for the rest of your natural term. It's a work as provocative as it is encyclopedic. Not everyone is going to agree with Schultz's choices, and the author is aware of the quagmire she's got herself into. "Why give the Pork Pit in Montego Bay the same weight as Paris' legendary Taillevent?" she asks, referring to two well-known but very different restaurants. The answer...
...rhetoric from the other side is choice this, choice that, choice choice choice,” says Schultz. “So [the campaign] adopts some of the rhetoric that the other side is always using in the continuing debate. We feel that they have too much thunder with their use of choice over the last three decades. The change in rhetoric is an attempt to take that bulwark away...
According to Schultz, last year’s March for Life in Washington, D.C. included a group of women who regretted their abortions. Hearing that message inspired the group’s president Daniel R. Tapia ’05 and vice president Laura E. Openshaw ’05 to contact Feminists for Life of America, a national pro-life group who came up with the slogan “women deserve better” and have launched a “college outreach program” aimed at spreading the message on campuses. Tapia and Openshaw then settled...
...also maintains that the postering campaign does not reflect a shift to the center—perhaps its only point of agreement with NARAL. There was no concern within HRL that the campaign represented any endorsement of the right to choose whether to have an abortion, according to Tapia. Schultz says, “The shift in the rhetoric comes from the recognition that more can be achieved in the short term if women stop making that decision, independent of the possibility of that option being taken away...I think if someone were really playing or teasing with the language...