Word: discussed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...They used the opportunity to discuss their hopes for the elections ahead, their frustrations with the political process to date and their recommendations for how to improve the political process," says a State Department official who attended the meeting...
...members controlling a guest space populated by male and female guests hand-picked at the door. None of these facts are particularly pretty. Some of them seem to fly in the face of what most Americans believe about gender, merit, and discrimination. In my experience, members of clubs do discuss these issues frequently and seriously, and not merely in hypothetical terms. Why, then, if I know and agree with some of these common objections, am I comfortable being a member of a final club? First of all, no acceptable alternative is on the table; after all, final clubs do fulfill...
...clear conviction as to why I should not.I often feel that I operate in two different worlds here at Harvard. In one, I find my favorite classmates and closest friends are those who challenge my opinions, make me engage important ideas, camp out in the dining hall to discuss issues much more complex than we would care to admit. They are the ones who, as I walk away, leave me dazed because they are, simply, so impressive. This world is my moral refuge—and in it there is no real place for my more unfortunate social tendencies.Then there...
...enough to make you want to spend a lot of money, which, fortunately, is possible for these residents of the highest tax bracket. Things have become so bad that a few of them are up in arms, getting petitions signed and calling for town meetings to discuss changing the street name. And they should change it. No one deserves to live that...
Leaders of various student groups convened last night to discuss minority participation in campus politics and to pledge continued cooperation between groups to improve minority representation in political issues. The discussion, co-sponsored by the Harvard College Democrats and a number of ethnic and gender groups, was the first of its kind in recent years and drew around 100 people. “This event we hope is the beginning of a discussion that will last a while and bring substantive changes to how campus politics function,” said Magdey A. Abdallah ’07, outreach director...