Word: expression
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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It’s not easy being a woman at Harvard. By and large, many female undergraduates express frustration with what they consider to be a male-dominated Faculty, a male-dominated social scene and an overall male-dominated atmosphere that this institution seems to perpetuate. If anything can be interpreted from the deluge of female-focused groups on campus, it is that many, many students are sorely aware of this problem and are actively trying to do something about it. The Radcliffe Union of Students (RUS) recently called for the conversion of part of Hilles Library into...
...columns and editorials that express nothing but shock, shock, shock at all the Republican hardball miss the pattern. This is the way Bush plays the game. This is the way he governs as president. Step one: Suppress dissent. Step two: If it happens anyway, punish the dissenter. Step three: Dismiss the offending facts...
...studio rehearsing for a couple of hours each day, I can’t even focus on my schoolwork. Dance is amazing because it can serve so many emotional and intellectual functions. If I’ve had a great day I can get into the studio and express that, just live in that joy. If I’m stressed, I can dance something more aggressive and get out a lot of anger. And if I need to procrastinate from schoolwork, I can sit down with a pad of paper, sketching out patterns and configurations for my choreography...
...Americans, we speak English, Spanish, French, German, Lenape, Swahili and any number of other tongues. We are free to speak these languages and express our diverse cultures because America’s founders, too, were immigrants, and understood the terms of oppression that caused them to flee their own native countries. But recent literature by Samuel P. Huntington, Harvard’s Weatherhead University Professor, has caught much of the Harvard community off-guard by disregarding this fundamental truth. Huntington’s critique of Latin American (particularly Mexican) immigration to the United States comes after a long history...
...bombings did not change the opinion of the Spanish voters as much as spur them to the voting booths to express their views. The ruling party lost only 900,000 of the vote tally it had received in the last election, but the Socialists expanded their own haul by almost 3 million. That's because voter turnout was about 10 percent higher than last time, and a convincing majority of the estimated 2 million first-time voters appear to have preferred the antiwar party...