Word: address
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...believe our failure to address these problems of extremism will lead to World War Three," Abizaid said...
...increase the expertise of faculty who are teaching ethics courses at professional school level, and to encourage younger scholars to make ethics teaching their career objective,” according to the Center’s Web site. Every year, the program brings together faculty and graduate students to address ethical issues in a wide range of disciplines, including government, journalism, law, medicine, public health, and public policy. Fellows participate in a weekly three-hour seminar with the Center, conduct independent research, and are encouraged to participate in various academic programs throughout the University. Under Thompson’s direction...
...Services Erin Nettifee wrote in an e-mail. The specific cause of the hardware failure was unknown. “We have a large network, so devices can fail. We do also have some older network devices, and we are beginning the process of doing a network refresh to address that issue going forward,” Nettifee wrote of the possibility of future Internet access interruptions. While Winthrop resident Denise Lambert ’07 called the interruption an “outrage,” another Winthrop resident Julian A. Gingold ’07 said...
...what should he do while he's there? John Esposito, a respected Islam scholar at Georgetown University, says the Pope can't confine himself to meetings with Christian leaders. "He must address the Muslim majority." Seyyed Hossein Nasr, a professor at George Washington University and one of the 38 signatories to the October letter to Benedict, says the Pope should deliver an "earnest expression of commonality"--even if it's only the widely accepted observation that Judaism, Christianity and Islam all claim descent from the biblical figure of Abraham. Father Richard McBrien, a theologian at Notre Dame, says that...
...Kosovo, Bosnia and Uzbekistan, wrote that "jihad ... means struggle, and specifically struggle in the way of God. This struggle may take many forms, including the use of force." The signers delicately criticized some acts of Muslim terrorism, such as the killing of a nun in Somalia, but failed to address the relationship between religion and politics in Islam, or whether the "maintenance of sovereignty" includes, as radical jihadists claim, the violent reconquest of Western lands that were once Muslim. Whether out of conviction or fear of being targeted by terrorists, the 38 did not frontally reject the linkage between violence...