Word: assaulted
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...great ones, between Chow and Su. He stands her against a wall and presses mouth to mouth. He moves back, and we see Su's lipstick violently smeared. A tear courses down her right cheek, then another down her left. It is a kiss like an assault; it has crushed not just her lips but her heart...
Thirteen campus groups, including Radcliffe Union of Students (RUS), the Office of Sexual Assault Prevention and Response, Athena Theatre Company and others, recently lobbied the Undergraduate Council for support to establish a Women’s Center at Harvard. The proposal, which has been front and center in a number of campus groups’ activism, would set aside two rooms in Hilles Library after its impending renovation. But while the proposed women’s center addresses some very valid concerns of Harvard women, it does so in only the most cosmetic way. We agree with many...
...three weeks ago, placed a former general in Saddam's army in charge of security and began joint patrols through the city with local Iraqi forces. So far, the patrols have gone off without major incident. The change in tactics--for weeks the U.S. had been threatening a massive assault on the city--was aimed, senior military sources say, at addressing what they believe was one of the occupation's most significant faults: the severing from the Sunni minority, which dominated Iraq under Saddam, of any sense that it had a stake in Iraq's future. Abizaid told TIME that...
...RECENTLY KOBE BRYANT GOT UP AT 4:00 A.M., FLEW TO COLORADO TO PLEAD NOT GUILTY IN HIS SEXUAL-ASSAULT CASE AND THEN RETURNED TO LOS ANGELES TO SCORE 42 POINTS IN A PLAYOFF GAME. HOW IS HE DOING THIS...
...deal looks like a cease-fire. To have taken the town in a frontal assault would have caused a level of civilian casualties that would have undermined the overall U.S. mission in Iraq. U.S. commanders on the ground chose instead to cut a deal, in recognition, perhaps, that the goal of militarily eliminating the insurgency before the U.S. goes home may be a bridge too far. For their part the insurgents clearly sense that, far from being "bitter enders" as Donald Rumsfeld likes to call them, they may in fact have a future in a new Iraq. That's precisely...