Word: deporte
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...Immigration and Naturalization Service to review cases individually. As a result, 3,500 of the least dangerous were freed. A federal appeals court later ruled that as excludables, the Cubans had no constitutional right to be released. That ruling did not affect those already freed. Washington wants to deport those still held in Atlanta, but Cuban President Fidel Castro has so far refused to let them return to Cuba...
...Aubuisson's solution to his nation's difficulties is straightforward: a military victory over the guerrillas. He has drawn cheers at rallies by promising on occasion that, if elected, he will deport all "leftists," a term that some rightists interpret as incorporating anyone who favors dialogue with the insurgents. D'Aubuisson talks of providing new investment incentives for business in the war-battered Salvadoran economy, and wins approval from thousands of small businessmen and farmers who have suffered grievously from the guerrilla strategy of attacking the country's economic infrastructure...
...very sorry we offended Michael Dorf '86 when my colleague and I poked fun at the Crimson headline, "Judge Decides Not to Deport Former Harvard Doctor/Rapist." We are both very sensitive to the seriousness of rape as a contemporary tragedy, and I'm pleased Mr. Dorf is also. We were making fun of a sloppy headline, not trivializing criminal behavior. It is a tragedy that an estimated one out of three women will be sexually assaulted at some time during their lives. It is a tragedy that nurses and patients become victims of rape at the hands of physicians they...
...letter, Ph.D. students Tim Reagan and Kim Schive took The Crimson to task for its usage of "doctor/rapist." Admittedly, this is a semantically unsound phrase; however, do Reagan and Schive believe for one moment that any of The Crimson's readers misunderstood the headline ("Judge Decides Not to Deport Former Harvard Doctor/Rapist") because of the slash? More likely they were looking for an opportunity to see their prose in print. Rape is a serious crime. That two Harvard Ph.D. candidates overlook this fact to have fun at a newspaper's expense--and at the expense of rape victims--is disheartening...
...were very intrigued by one of your recent headlines: "Judge Decides Not to Deport Former Harvard Doctor/Rapist" (January 19, 1983). Several questions immediately sprang to mind. First, we were not aware that Harvard even had a position called "doctor/rapist." Does this represent a joint appointment as both a doctor and a rapist or is it one integral position with a compound tide? Second, now that the subject of your article has left this position, who has replaced him, or does the position remain vacant? What qualification are required for a doctor/rapist anyway? The Reagan Kim Schive Ph.D. students, Psychology...