Word: ende
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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OFFENSE PositionLettermen Candidates Tight End Kevin Pat Boultinghouse Mike Oeth Split End Mark Bianchi Chris Mann Rodney Taylor Tackle Gerald Mahon Tom Callahan Gerald Pecora Mike Zweber Guard Buz Crain Steve Connolly Mike Sukal Joe Zupanic Center Mike Bertuccio Darrin Duda Josh Fischer Quarterback Tim Perry Chris Salvaterra Pete Bassett A. Lazarre-White Tom Priore Fullback Art McMahon Chuck Greene Wingback Jim Reidy David Haller Bert Smyers Halfback Silas Myers Anthony Cutone Andy Bell David...
DEFENSE Position Lettermen Candidates End Tom Schreur John Boyer Tony Khazen Barry Littman Tackle Mike Murphy Rich Puccio Mike Vollmer J. Brzezenski Neal Kaufman Darren Langis C. Arnow Jared Levin John Sparks Middle Guard Greg Gicewicz Bruce Mckee Linebacker Rick McIntire Craig Peck Joe Gordian David Weiss Mark Pare Brian Powilatis Adjuster Bobby Frame Chris Maroney Eldon Johnson Mike Patterson Sean Warren Cornerback Cory Thabit Chris Rezendes Jon Lawrence Mark Bowen Jeff lafrati Rick Sofield Safety Jim Smith Bill Sellers
Next, Lions running back Solomon Johnson helplessly watches his fumble roll into the Columbia end zone, where Captain Greg Gicewicz scurries to smother the ball for another Harvard...
...Kennan, wrote an article in another erudite quarterly, Foreign Affairs, on the need for the West to pursue a policy of "containment" against Soviet Communism. President Bush has spoken of moving "beyond containment." Fukuyama has gone his boss one better, proclaiming that we may be witnessing "not just the end of the Cold War, or the passing of a particular period of postwar history, but the end of history as such: that is, the end point of mankind's ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government...
...credit, Fukuyama is grappling with important and difficult ideas. But his boldness misfires. To ruminate about "the end of history" in the present tense is the philosophical equivalent of that cheerful banality "Today is the first day of the rest of your life." Fukuyama is not really addressing the subject of history at all. He is looking through the wrong end of the telescope at current events, at a period barely twice his age (he is 36). Whether it is dead, dying or merely having a bad decade, Communism, in the sense that Fukuyama and almost everyone else thinks about...