Word: expressed
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...college years provide each of us with a unique opportunity to find a voice. We began to express ourselves before we got here, and we will continue to develop our voices when we leave. But college is a luxury of time, of resources, of energy that can be used to develop not only something important to say, but a distinctive style of saying...
...express support for two bills currently under consideration by the state legislature which would allow the state to issue bonds for construction of new affordable housing...
Your rhetoric about "Orwellian techniques," "big brother tactics," and "willingness to suffocate [First Amendment rights]" simply lacks foundation. As I have stressed many times, students at the Law School are free to express their views on any subject in a variety of ways--in meetings with me, in letters and petitions and in rallies and demonstrations that do not disrupt the activities of others at the school or violate University rules. They do so regularly, and dissent at the Law School is not in short supply...
...just better quotes but fewer quotes. The Masson case is a reminder that the accuracy and wisdom of a piece of journalism inevitably depends on "the author's own observations and conclusions," as Judge Kozinski puts it. It is often more efficient, not to say more honest, to express these directly. Quotes can become a crutch. Or rather, "Quotes can become a crutch," says one observer of the journalistic scene...
...they committed their offenses. Lord Shawcross, Britain's chief prosecutor at Nuremberg, railed against the bill when it was sent to the Queen above the peers' protest. "This is not a house of wimps," he declared. "It is the House of Lords. We are expected by the public to express our view honestly and clearly...