Word: badness
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Some individuals insist any discrimination is wrong, as witness Jeanne Wirka, president of the Radcliffe Union of Students, quoted in the January-February 1985 issue of Harvard Magazine: "The problem with clubs is that they are denigrating to the outgroup in general. It's too bad that the issue has become 'should the clubs admit women?' The point is that the clubs should exclude everybody [sic]--they simply shouldn't be here, and Harvard shouldn't have anything to do with them." Jake Stevens '86, a member of the Committee on College Life, puts it less broadly, "The Committee acts...
Chris Farley had the guts to rain on America's parade (pronounced facade), and discuss issues that often leave a bad taste going down. When are the rest of us? David Patent...
There are plenty of bums in Cambridge. Don't call them transients, vagrants, victims. They're bums. Who smell bad. Who don't work. Who talk dirty. Who sleep on vents throughout the city at night when it's fifteen degrees or colder while passersby proffer money and pity and wonder what it's like to be one of them. A bum in Cambridge. To huddle on a heat vent...
...resurrecting styles of the past without any touch of self-parody, the Colourfield is providing a tour through the banality of the Sixties. This is too bad because the Colourfield has an excellent producer and talented musicians. When Hall and company play around with dissonance, the results are interesting as on "Pushing Up Daisies" and "The Colourfield." The former even has aguitar solo in which Lyons sounds like he actually cares what he is playing: a very catious sign of hope...
...vegetarian song even on wax--the first is "Meat is Murder" by the Smiths. That song like most is a reflection of the colourfield's attitude problem, a problem easily fixed by introducing Hall to Husker Du's lead guitarist and singer Bob Mould on one of Mould's bad nights. That would be a lesson in commitment...