Word: want
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...going to get better. I bought the new keyboard, had the tray, had the chair, and have been typing the whole year. Now my back and neck are still a little problematic but I don t say I have RSI anymore. I have a bad back." If it wants to deal with the problem, he believes, the University has a responsibility to "install the proper workstations in every single room. If they want you to live on campus and they re going to provide you with a desk, they should supply you with the correct desk...since they supply...
...over matter" schools of medicine have traditionally been viewed with extreme skepticism by the Western medical extablishment. Especially in Boston, such dogma smacks of Mary Baker Eddy s Christian Science Movement (especially in the light of recent highly publicized cases where Christian Scientist parents let their children die for want of medical care). Up until the 1960s, the accepted model of how pain worked was the one proposed by Descartes in the 17th Century. According to Descartes, a painful sensation is strictly a physical and mechanical phenomenon, as simple as pressing a piano key and getting a tone...
...think it would be really hard to replace this class because it wasn't just about the academics," Kanter says. "The professors of this class try to take what you believe in and then make you look at it and think about why you believe in it, what you want to do about it and how you want to go about dealing with it. This is something I haven't experienced here at Harvard often...
Richmond said he also felt that graduate student advising was very important. "We want to make sure that it stays an issue with the faculty because they have the quality of advising in their hands," he said...
...moderates do not want to be pigeonholed, but not because they are unprincipled. Instead, it is because they do not want to lose their individual voice and personal opinions. What is the difference between a moderate who adamantly supports diversity but sees affirmative action as discriminatory and the liberal who adamantly supports diversity and supports affirmative action? Is one less principled...