Word: shouldnã
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...Life” and “Jumper,” the San Francisco quartet has struck a chord with college students riding high: Clinton is president, “Ally McBeal” is on at nine, and things are looking up for the twenty-first century. Why shouldn??t we smile? The cloning of Dolly the sheep has at last muted the virulent debate over bioethics, we’ve secured a budget surplus only a fool would deem exhaustible and the storm clouds of Cold War anxiety have retreated from view. America?...
...because they think they don’t know everything about politics,” Arbuthnott said. “But this workshop isn’t as political as everything else.” Though Winston maintained that she “is of the school that speechwriters shouldn??t be seen or heard—they shouldn??t really be out there taking credit for this or that line,” perhaps the biggest message of her workshop was the capacity for influence in her profession. Great speeches “can move...
...three days before the young team began the crucial Ivy League schedule, a slate of matches that began with Harvard’s first-ever loss to Cornell. Asked if his announcement affected the squad in the loss, Graham said, “It might have, who knows. It shouldn??t have. You never know in this sport.” Tuesday’s announcement shocked freshman Lena Litvak, who Graham recruited to Harvard last year. Returning back to the Yard after practice, Litvak found herself besieged by recruits anxious to know what Graham?...
...embarrassed that none of its 41 varsity teams have an African American at the helm.“They’re just getting the best person,” Harris said. “It’s not necessarily African American, white, Asian, Hispanic—it shouldn??t matter. It just happens that two of the frontrunners are African American, but I don’t know who else is being considered.”The athletic administration has been in frequent contact with the members of the basketball team, who have met with...
...something to be reckoned with, but the discovery that the transient narrative force was none other than Angelica herself leads only to disappointment. She is not nearly as conflicted as the story calls for; she is simply petulant and whiny, cajoling the reader for desiring a resolution that he shouldn??t even want or need. The book would be better if Phillips had cut out the last section and left the novel as a phantasm, a hauntress, a gleam of something mysterious, intriguing, and not so finally resolved and inarticulate. The meat of the novel has momentum...