Word: andrews
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Burma Deserves Better Thanks to Andrew Marshall for his wonderful first-person account of the recent peaceful protests in Burma [Oct. 22]. As I read it, I couldn't help but think that perhaps this was the country Vice President Dick Cheney was thinking about when he said our invading forces would be greeted as liberators. It's a shame that Saddam Hussein was so evil and his country so rich in resources that we had to get rid of him by force. Yet Burma, a country rich in culture and tradition, can only wait for U.N. sanctions that will...
Former White House Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card, Jr. said for the first time yesterday that he resigned from the Bush administration last year in part because “the president needed for me to leave, and the administration needed to have me leave.” “I think they needed to demonstrate change, and I don’t think you can have a change without it being personified,” Card said in an interview with The Crimson. Card’s remarks appear to contradict the official explanation given by President...
Surrounded by a crowd of 92,407 fans on a muggy Louisiana night in September, one-time Harvard freshman Andrew Hatch took the field in his first ever college football appearance. The quarterback passed the ball for nine yards on his first play during Louisiana State University’s 44-0 victory over Middle Tennessee State...
...Andrew S. Loewer, president of the College Libertarians at Cornell University, sees a similar libertarian trend at Cornell and with peers: “Our generation is a lot more accepting than previous when it comes to alternate lifestyles and differences in choice,” adding in an e-mail that, “Many feel we’ve been betrayed by a government that’s fighting a war most Americans don’t want, spending money without regard to the future and not addressing our nation’s problems. Call us selfish...
...Andrew C. Coles ’09 was first attracted to the African and African-American Studies department—the post-2003 title for the former Afro-American Studies department—because it combined a broad base in the humanities with a narrower focus on African-American culture. He initially worried, however, that his ethnicity would affect the way people perceived his academic choices. “I was afraid that I would be, quote unquote, that black kid doing that black stuff,” he says...