Word: cite
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Most highly-recruited high school athletes who eventually come to Harvard cite education as the factor that tipped the scales. Ronald Cuccia '82, shunned a host of attractive scholarships to further his football career at Soldiers Field. "It was pretty tempting to accept a full scholarship. I might have had more fun somewhere else, but I figured I'd learn the most here," Cuccia, who shattered several passing records as a high school quarterback in southern California, explains. Robert Hackett '82, a prominent Crimson swimmer and Olympic silver medallist, list a full scholarship, money, a car, prearranged dates, and special...
...very great disservice to continue the ignorant claims that these practices no longer exist or, as was stated in a signed letter printed in The Crimson by S. Allen Counter: "According to authorities, these practices among remote African tribes, have long since been outlawed." Mr. Counter should cite those authorities...
...contemplate the comparative plausibility of various arguments and evidences using Adler's favored standard of judgment, the jury's proof "beyond a reasonable doubt." This permits atheists to avoid having to disprove God absolutely, which is as hard to do as prove his existence, and lets theists cite human phenomena that strict empiricism used to rule out. In The Existence of God (Oxford; $37.50), Richard Swinburne of England's Keele University concludes: "The experience of so many men in their moments of religious vision corroborates what nature and history show to be quite likely-that there...
...Massachusetts primary to print the text of his basic speech with a picture of him campaigning in Boston. From its feature headlined "Anderson: Bartering Ideas for Votes" to the Tom Wicker column, "Idea Man From Illinois," the theme is the same. Oddly enough, the fresh ideas writers generally cite to bear out the thesis can be counted on the thumbs of one hand: the 50-50 gas tax plan. Otherwise, Anderson's campaign is rather unimaginative. Even the slogans are remarkably unoriginal: "Why Not the Best?" is borrowed from the incumbent, and "The Anderson Difference" echoes a commercial for Anacin...
...From such information, the Immigration and Naturalization Service probably could uncover great numbers of the illegals. To overcome the illegals' fear of the census, the bureau insists that no one but sworn census workers will have access to the individual records for 72 years. Bureau officials proudly cite their refusal during World War II to allow the War Department to have the names and addresses of Japanese Americans who had registered in the 1940 census...