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...also write that if Iraq erupts into a "full-blown civil war" or develops a government "hostile to America," the result would be "extraordinarily undesirable" for the U.S. Can either be ruled out? The jury is still out on both of those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 10 Questions for James Baker | 10/2/2006 | See Source »

...Frazier's Thirteen Moons (Random House; 422 pages) isn't about the end of the world, just the end of a world. Frazier is something of an ambulance chaser when it comes to historical disasters--his best seller Cold Mountain was about the fall of the South in the Civil War. Thirteen Moons, Frazier's second novel, consists of the late-life recollections of one Will Cooper, an orphan who at 12 was put in charge of a remote trading post on the outskirts of the Cherokee Nation. There Will encountered two father figures--the wise, laconic chief Bear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Writers on the Storm | 10/1/2006 | See Source »

...stands, and Quincy was under construction. Radcliffe and Harvard shared only classes, and few extracurricular groups were co-ed. Two years after Brown v. Board of Education, we were almost entirely white, disproportionately preppies, and insensitive to both the discomfort of our very few minority classmates and the wider civil rights issues fermenting around the nation...

Author: By James F. Flug | Title: Back to the Future: 50 Years Later a Freshman Returns | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

...individual student, could—do anything directly about the election. Many of the faculty members were active in these campaigns, but that didn’t rub off on most of us. My public service consisted of helping form the Harvard Motor Scooter Corps of Cambridge Civil Defense, which, in case of nuclear attack, would ride out to find passable roads for fire trucks...

Author: By James F. Flug | Title: Back to the Future: 50 Years Later a Freshman Returns | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

UNESCO Chair in Comparative Human Rights Amii Omara-Otunnu ’80 accused the media of selectively covering certain humanitarian crises while turning a blind eye to others, especially the on-going civil war in Uganda, at a film screening and discussion event Wednesday night. The event was co-sponsored by Harvard African Students Association (HASA) and uNight, an organization dedicated to raising awareness about the humanitarian catastrophe taking place in northern Uganda. Since the initial 1986 rebellion, Uganda has seen constant conflict between the government and the rebel forces which reorganized as the Lord’s Resistance...

Author: By Nan Ni, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: UNESCO Chair Slams Media Silence | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

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