Word: hurt
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...most interesting guy to come off the DL will be Nomar. Could Reese actually be the better option at shortstop? It seems silly—but, in worst case, Boston has shown that winning is possible without Garciaparra. No one wants a guy who gets hurt every year, and even though Nomar is the heart and soul of the Red Sox, if Boston can win without him, he won’t be back next year...
...balance must be found. Currently, the State Department has swung too far away (and in too disorganized a fashion) from welcoming visitors who are essential to America’s vitality, innovation and global leadership. Finding this appropriate balance is crucial, and continuing under the current framework will hurt national interests and compromise America’s future. The United States accrues enormous security benefits from the higher education community by leading the world in technological innovation. Current declines in foreign graduate school applicants will undermine the position of American universities as international forums for academic exchange...
Employees at Black Ink and Bob Slate would not comment yesterday on whether the Cross opening would hurt their business, because they said they had not yet visited the Cross store...
...curricular review’s theme of “internationalization” is in part a call for more of this kind of fluffy treatment of foreign cultures, sanitized through a Western “pluralistic” lens so that nobody’s feelings get hurt. Meanwhile, students who do not hew a narrow ideological line will suffer in the classroom. Kenan Professor of Government Harvey C. Mansfield ’53 described Harvard professors to the Boston Globe: “Everybody is a liberal and shows it. They conduct classes in such...
...disease--yet cleanup funds have been cut so sharply that it could take 10 to 15 years to finish the job. In Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, miners dumped 60 million tons of toxic metals into waterways, but state officials are fighting a Superfund cleanup, fearing a stigma that might hurt tourism. In New York, General Electric, which contaminated 40 miles of the Hudson River with cancer-causing PCBs, has hired high-profile attorney Laurence Tribe to convince federal courts that the Superfund law is unconstitutional. And in New Jersey, where the rabbits frolicking around the Chemical Insecticide Corp. plant once...