Word: spitefully
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...18th birthday, in spite of the lack of festivities, was a significant occasion. At 18, I could vote, buy lottery tickets, pornography, and cigarettes, sign my own name on legally binding contracts, get my senior drivers license, and be drafted into the army. Yet, the list of things I could not legally do was still a formidable one. And, high on that list, were alcohol consumption and gambling. While most people look forward to their 21st birthday as the day they will finally be able to drink (legally), the gambling age has received little scrutiny. A search on LexisNexis...
...student safety is far better served by treating alcohol consumption as a health issue and not a disciplinary one. But the BPD has tied Harvard’s hands. As this year’s Game approaches, we look forward to partying in harmony with law enforcement, not in spite...
...mask the outward signs of the process or try to keep up old routines in spite of it, but we cannot change the fact that we are all moving toward physical change. The best we can do--and it is a lot--is to accept the inevitability of aging and try to adapt to it, to be in the best health we can at any age. To my mind the denial of aging and the attempt to fight it are counterproductive, a failure to understand and accept an important aspect of our existence. Such attitudes are major obstacles to aging...
This administration was willing to wade through hell and high water for the Bolton nomination because of personal friendship (and, one suspects, just to spite the rest of the world) but has flinched from every actual ideological conflict. Bush has gone five years without casting a veto and caved on almost every domestic argument (excepting tax cuts) from Social Security to Medicaid reform—which metamorphosed from a serious reform empowering individuals to just another entitlement program. He hasn’t seen a spending bill or an expansion of Federal powers that he didn’t like...
...Harvey Pekar's The Quitter and Shane White's North Country both tell powerful coming-of-age stories from completely different places and times. In spite of that, their similarities make for striking comparison reading. While either would make a fine addition to this growing sub-genre, to have both in one month feels almost gluttonous...