Word: societyã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Enabling international students to attend colleges in America’s free and open society??and encouraging Americans to spend time at universities abroad—is an important way we can combat the ignorance and hatred which manifested itself on Sept. 11. Therefore, where possible, friendly foreign governments should assist U.S. agencies in their background checks to weed out potential terrorists. All stand to gain from extending foreign students a safe and speedy welcome...
...Book” for short. The basic premise was that civilization had almost been extinguished, and it was a responsibility of American higher education to ensure that the students it was educating would not let the same thing happen again. The phrase “a free society?? is brilliantly complex. It plainly refers to America, and the ideals of human freedom that are among America’s founding principles and derive from a particular transatlantic intellectual history. It suggests that America need not be the only free society, but it is the one within which...
...this country’s founding principles of freedom and equality. In the next review, how will the Harvard Faculty balance the reality that the U.S. is one nation among many in an ever smaller and more interconnected world, with a recognition that the particular “free society?? in which Harvard exists is founded on ideals which Americans continue to be proud to defend and preserve...
Sociology 11: American Society??I have personally benefited enormously this summer from a certain MTV program that has shown me what people are truly like in the “Real World”—lazy, homophobic and painfully self-absorbed. And I think our society will really benefit from a show that’s set to air this fall about couples on the verge of divorce who think that spending a week on a tropical island, constantly surrounded by video cameras and other miserable couples will help to bring them back together...
Hopefully the historical society??s future events and eventual museum will promote interest in more diverse aspects of Lexington’s history than a history of battle reenactments. Yet judging from some of the local published works on Lexington’s last two centuries, even these accounts are not complete pictures of the past...