Word: mood
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This time is different. Twenty-eight Americans have died in the war since October, but the national mood remains resolute. Here, without argument, is one way in which Sept. 11 truly has changed the way we think. "The American public," says Ralph Peters, a retired Army lieutenant colonel and a military scholar, "is sensible about war and amazingly stoical." Who, six months ago, would have dared say that...
...that relies on both an ultra-right and a center-left faction. Thus he cannot lean too far in either direction without risking that one of the coalition members will quit, bringing his government down. If that were to happen, new elections would follow. With Israelis in a hawkish mood, Sharon's right-wing Likud Party would almost surely make significant electoral gains. But Sharon might not be his party's candidate for Prime Minister. Former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who told TIME last week that he intends to challenge Sharon at the next opportunity, has considerably more support within...
Rather than being solely the result of her efforts, Pedersen said, the increasing importance of her office has reflected a general mood in the Faculty to make undergraduate education a higher priority...
...Along the way, Doyle, who in December took out the New York Film Critics Circle prize for In the Mood for Love, became the latest Australian cinematographer to grace an awards podium (another, the veteran Don McAlpine was recently Oscar-nominated for Moulin Rouge). It's a strength of vision that Doyle puts down partly to Australia's clarity of light?"because the relationship between our living spaces and the environment is so direct, and because our internal life has to be replenished by something," he says. "I mean, most Australians are pretty grounded people, so when the imagination goes...
...This time is different. Twenty-eight Americans have died in the war since October, but the national mood remains resolute. Here, without argument, is one way in which Sept. 11 truly has changed the way we think. "The American public," says Ralph Peters, a retired Army lieutenant colonel and a military scholar, "is sensible about war and amazingly stoical." Who, six months ago, would have dared say that...