Word: aida
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Radcliffe's lot a chapter, established in 1914, selected 51 members of the Class of 1982 as new inductees and tapped for honorary memberships. Pauline Kael, film critic for New Yorker Magazine, Aida Press '48 the editor of Radcliffe Quarterly. Eileen Southern, professor of Afro-American Studies and of Music, and Dtana Trilling, author of Mrs. Harris...
Brown is "very much a street person." Coleman said, adding that he met Brown at a performance of the opens "Aida," to which Loebig had brought Brown in an attempt to expose him to a better environment...
...Aida is asked whether she recalls anything joyful in her life...
...Aida's father has been hauled off to jail again. She does not know why. Aida recalls that when he was taken to prison the first time, she was 13. "I was afraid. I did not know if I would ever see him again." Whenever she looks at an Israeli, she sees "an enemy. Only an enemy...
...level of suffering among these children seems to be in direct proportion to their level of optimism. Aida in the West Bank and Joseph in Belfast are far more soured on life than are Boutros and Jamila in Lebanon, who have more to be sour about. This is not surprising; adults who have endured hardships often manage a more optimistic view than their experiences would justify. What is surprising here is that some of the children who have suffered the most are not only the more optimistic; they also show the greatest amount of charity toward their fellows, including their...