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Word: thereinlies (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...regions instead, the loss of life would have been vastly lower. While all of us are vulnerable to the furies of nature--earthquakes, droughts, floods, epidemic diseases, blights and pests--these scourges systematically claim the lives of the poor in vastly greater numbers than they do the rich. Yet therein lies one key answer on how we should proceed in the wake of this disaster...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Class System of Catastrophe | 1/2/2005 | See Source »

...limits exist in initiative campaigns. While two out of three voters in a recent Field Research Corporation and California Health Care Foundation poll mentioned that state initiatives were a good thing, half also think proposition elections achieve the goals of special interests rather the goals of the people. And therein lies the problem. Voters want to be able exercise their right to make direct decisions, but are uneasy with how outside interests can take over the process...

Author: By Eric Lee, | Title: California: Taking the Initiative | 11/2/2004 | See Source »

...indelibility of the printed image is played with too, as well as its precision: There are modern woodcuts and prints that are deliberately altered after impression. The moment of the act of printing might have passed, just as the era of the print is fading, but therein lies the value of the museum, especially one of resource and direction as didactic as the Fogg...

Author: By Ross N. Halbert, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Poetry at a Standstill in Prints Exhibit at the Fogg | 10/15/2004 | See Source »

...defects behind those attacks forces the debaters to focus on facts. The debate tomorrow night will focus only on foreign policy issues, and provide the American people with the opportunity to examine each candidate’s view of the world, and America’s place therein. In this respect, President Bush holds a distinct advantage over John Kerry as the result of an accomplished foreign policy record over the past four years...

Author: By James P.M. Paquette, | Title: A Question of Leadership | 9/30/2004 | See Source »

...popular consumption—and no, it should not be judged a serious scholarly endeavor—but neither excuse reduces the gravity of Tribe’s error. When a distinguished professor attaches his name to a published work, there is no justification for any plagiarism contained therein...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Where is the Academy? | 9/30/2004 | See Source »

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