Word: someday
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...states with outright bans on doctor-assisted suicide may now enforce them with greater assurance, the court rulings did not preclude states from voting to allow assisted suicide, as Oregon did in 1994. The right Rehnquist denied was so broadly stated that more modest constitutional claims may someday be affirmed. And five Justices, a majority, wrote concurring opinions that further qualified his meaning. The court's fondest hope appeared to be that its judgment, as Rehnquist wrote, "permits this debate to continue, as it should in a democratic society." The court also seemed to encourage further work with pain-managing...
...moral of this funny and acerbic family novel is, Don't give your clever eight-year-old anything to write about. Do not twit, tease, appall, amuse, behave weirdly in the presence of, or otherwise give fertile novelistic material to, the sort of shrewd moppet who may someday find a publisher...
...answer may lie in Japan's typically ambivalent attitude toward opening up to the rest of the world. While Japan limits the number of foreign baseball players it imports, the country still wants to reach U.S. standards, so that a Japanese team could someday meet the American champs in a real World Series. That goal finally seems plausible, now that Japan's Hideo Nomo has become an All-Star in the U.S., and New York Yankee farmhand Hideki Irabu is mowing down American batters with 99 m.p.h. fast balls...
...Thompson somehow lived up to his brash self-advertisements, in part because he was able to reflect the dark and roiling energies of young America. As early as 1964, he saw Ronald Reagan as "the prototype of the new mythological American...who will probably someday be President." One year earlier he noticed that Richard Nixon was indestructible, "a vengeful Zero with nine lives." Thompson, in fact, was that loneliest of creatures, an idealist without illusions, ready to kowtow to no one and as contemptuous of beatniks and hippies as of the "rotarians" they rebelled against. Surveying the 1960s like...
...political history," she says. "We elect women like there was no tomorrow."Photo Courtesy of Martha StewartAVERY W. GARDINER '97, who hopes to occupy the White House someday, speaks with a current occupant, HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON...