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Word: fidelitys (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...This showed in the outcry earlier this year when the Miami-Dade school board, whose system has a dismal 45% graduation rate, announced that it would spend tens of thousands of dollars in court to ban a kindergarten book about Cuba that it says isn't tough enough on Fidel Castro...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letter From Miami: There's Trouble--Lots Of It--in Paradise | 11/19/2006 | See Source »

...Reagan Administration had worked so obsessively in the 1980s to topple the Sandinistas, and because the Bush Administration had urged Aleman's prosecution as part of a wider crackdown on corruption in Latin America. Ortega is also a friend of Bush's hemispheric archfoes, Cuba's communist leader Fidel Castro and Venezuela's radical leftist President Hugo Chavez. The Bush Administration, in fact, has warned that if Ortega wins it may cut U.S. aid to Nicaragua...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: An Old Bogeyman Makes a Comeback in Nicaragua | 11/3/2006 | See Source »

...while, the fidel-capped bloggers weren’t sure about The Killers. But then Brandon Flowers, the band’s lead singer, announced that their 2006 LP would be among the best albums of the past twenty years. And then “Sam’s Town” finally dropped, and it turned out that by “best” Flowers meant “derivative” and “pompous.” Cue the indie backlash...

Author: By Jake G. Cohen, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Popscreen: The Killers | 11/2/2006 | See Source »

...case of Fidel E. Solano, a longtime security guard employed under the security firm Allied-Barton, highlights the need for such a code of conduct. According to Emerson Harris, Solano’s volunteer representative from the Service Employees International Union, after not being paid fully for the hours he had worked, Solano was forced to choose between paying his rent and paying for his heart medication. Harris reports that, having foregone the much needed medication, Solano had a heart attack in Lamont in January 2006. Invisible to most students, with no union to represent him, he is still struggling...

Author: By Rosa M. Norton, Jose G. Olivarez, and Jessica G. Ranucci | Title: Harvard’s Invisible Victims | 10/25/2006 | See Source »

...wrangling with Uncle Sam it took to receive the appropriate licensing. This opportunity is a welcome one for Harvard students, who have been unable to study in Cuba since the Bush administration tightened its travel restrictions in 2004.The prospect of change in Cuba—presaged by Cuban President Fidel Castro’s delegating power to his brother, Raul, this past summer—makes this opportunity all the more timely. Harvard students can serve as cultural and ideological ambassadors to a country that has had only minimal contact with the U.S. in the past 45 years. The program...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Cantabs in Cuba | 10/4/2006 | See Source »

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