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During the Great Depression, Oppenheimer began to involve himself in left-wing politics. Many of those closest to him were card-carrying Communists, including his off-and-on lover Jean Tatlock, his younger brother Frank, and his wife Kitty Harrison...

Author: By David Zhou, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: BOOKENDS: ‘Forgetful Prof Parks Girl, Takes Self Home’ | 5/4/2005 | See Source »

What was unique about this particular attack, however, is that the attackers left a business card. On the defaced home page, in addition to the name of their organization (and, admittedly, “Unknown Core” is a name with some irony given that they came after Harvard right in the middle of heated debate surrounding our curricular review), they left their own pseudonyms: our assailants were “esqu1n4”, “_TGm_”, “Stealh”, and the mysterious “S.” They also...

Author: By Matthew A. Gline, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Anatomy of an Attack | 5/3/2005 | See Source »

With the division crown in the bag—and although the Crimson lost 8-5—Joe Walsh used the last game of the regular season to have a little fun with his lineup card...

Author: By Pablo S. Torre, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Baseball Takes Title with Dartmouth Split | 5/3/2005 | See Source »

Attempting to stifle dissent through gross exaggeration and perpetration of “you’re with us or against us” rhetoric is nothing new in the upper echelons of the Republican Party. Playing the faith card in order to galvanize against a legislative privilege, however, represents a new perversion of our political leaders. Students should be concerned, not only because it threatens our freedom to dissent and operate freely in a secular academic sphere, but because it threatens to shepherd judges into power who will influence our lives and narrow our freedoms as individual Americans long...

Author: By Matthew A. Busch, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The New Perversion | 5/3/2005 | See Source »

...with an inflammatory front page article focusing exclusively on a minute portion of partygoers who reacted to the foam (“Lather Suds Rub Partiers Wrong Way,” News, Apr. 19), a malicious (albeit facetious) editorial and an unduly harsh April 21 Fifteen Minutes party report card (apparently also meant in jest). These articles make spiteful accusations in the spirit of parody without ever mentioning what they assume the whole campus already knows: that the vast majority of partygoers, even many of those irritated by the foam, considered this year’s Lather an overwhelming success...

Author: By Ryan J. Abraham and Jessica L. Jones, S | Title: The Crimson Got All Lathered Up for the Wrong Reasons | 5/2/2005 | See Source »

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