Word: somehows
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...positive effects of an Iraq war is that it will ease the path to Israeli-Palestinian peace. The president believes that the key obstacle to peace right now is Palestinian terrorism - again on display in Haifa Wednesday, where a suicide bomber killed 15 Israelis - and that removing Saddam will somehow stop that terrorism. "The passing of Saddam Hussein's regime will deprive terrorist networks of a wealthy patron that pays for terrorist training, and offers rewards to families of suicide bombers," the president said in a speech last week. "Without this outside support for terrorism, Palestinians who are working...
...second operative part of the resolution, which establishes a process to refund student groups for lost posters, is procedurally infeasible and ineffective at promoting free speech. First, there is no way for clubs to verify the number of posters lost to vandalism. Second, even if a council committee could somehow discern legitimate claims from dubious ones, simply reimbursing recognized clubs will not alter the community’s feeling concerning the freedom of expression. The dilemma that makes this problem so urgent is not the fiscal loss to recognized student clubs, but the loss of their University-guaranteed free speech...
...bound to the success or failure of a foreign country as it is to Israel today. And I don't like it. Klein should write an article titled "How America Is Wrapped Up in Israel," because we don't seem to be able to do anything anywhere without its somehow being connected to Israel. CHRISTINE SELLITTO New York City...
...idea that you have somehow been chosen by history to do something very important allows you to take the risks that may eventually lead to you doing something important and also leads to those losing bets that so many lives end up as,” he says. “If you didn’t think that you were chosen in that way, you wouldn’t make the wager in the first place and nothing would happen...
Piles of internship applications loom atop my printer. To my right, Russian memoirs and the Bible await reading, while to my left the Styrofoam remnants of a take-home physics lab sit gloomily. But with R.E.M.’s Automatic for the People blasting from my stereo, I somehow know the varied elements of my life at Harvard will work themselves out—a quick listen to “Try Not to Breathe” and “Nightswimming,” and everything will be okay...